Literature DB >> 19412630

A prospective study of false-positive diagnosis of micrometastatic cells in the sentinel lymph nodes in colorectal cancer.

D Wiese1, S Saha, B Yestrepsky, A Korant, S Sirop.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Sentinel lymph node mapping (SLNM) with multilevel sections (MLS) and cytokeratin immunohistochemistry (CK-IHC) of sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) upstages 15-20% of patients (pts). False-positive SLNs occur in breast cancer due to mechanical transport of cells during mapping procedures, or to pre-existing benign cellular inclusions. Our prospective study evaluated whether colorectal mapping procedures alone caused false positives.
METHODS: A total of 314 pts underwent SLNM with blue dye. Ninety of the pts underwent a second mapping in normal bowel away from the primary tumor. The first 1-5 blue nodes near the primary tumor were marked as SLNs; those near the second injection site were marked as nontumor SLNs (nt-SLNs). All SLNs and nt-SLNs were evaluated by MLS and CK-IHC.
RESULTS: Of 314 pts, 30 had benign tumor and 284 had invasive cancer. SLNM was successful in 274/284 (96.5%) invasive cancer pts, with 728 SLNs identified. Forty-six of the 274 pts (16.8%) had low-volume metastasis in 57 SLNs: 31 pts (11.3%) had 38 SLNs with micrometastasis (>0.2 mm, <or=2 mm), while 15 pts (5.5%) had 19 SLNs with isolated tumor cells (<or=0.2 mm). For 100 pts with second SLNM (70/90 pts successfully mapped with 102 nt-SLNs), or with SLNM of benign pathology (30/30 pts successfully mapped with 88 SLNs), there were no false positives in any of 190 nodes (P < 0.001).
CONCLUSION: No false positives due to mechanical transport of cells or to benign cellular inclusions were identified in 190 lymph nodes from 100 patients with SLNM in benign bowel.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19412630     DOI: 10.1245/s10434-009-0497-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol        ISSN: 1068-9265            Impact factor:   5.344


  4 in total

1.  Blue dye injection does not induce dissemination of epithelial cells during SLN procedure in colon cancer patients.

Authors:  Hannes J Larusson; Urs von Holzen; Carsten T Viehl; Farid Rezaeian; Hans-Martin Riehle; Daniel Oertli; Ulrich Guller; Markus Zuber
Journal:  Int J Colorectal Dis       Date:  2014-04-25       Impact factor: 2.571

Review 2.  Challenging the conventional treatment of colon cancer by sentinel lymph node mapping and its role of detecting micrometastases for adjuvant chemotherapy.

Authors:  Sukamal Saha; Mohamed Elgamal; Meghan Cherry; Robin Buttar; Swetha Pentapati; Suresh Mukkamala; Kiran Devisetty; Sunil Kaushal; Mustafa Alnounou; Trevor Singh; Sandeep Grewal; David Eilender; Madan Arora; David Wiese
Journal:  Clin Exp Metastasis       Date:  2018-08-16       Impact factor: 5.150

3.  Ex vivo localization and immunohistochemical detection of sentinel lymph node micrometastasis in patients with colorectal cancer can upgrade tumor staging.

Authors:  Fu-Long Wang; Fang Shen; De-Sen Wan; Zhen-Hai Lu; Li-Ren Li; Gong Chen; Xiao-Jun Wu; Pei-Rong Ding; Ling-Heng Kong; Zhi-Zhong Pan
Journal:  Diagn Pathol       Date:  2012-06-22       Impact factor: 2.644

4.  Clinical translation of ex vivo sentinel lymph node mapping for colorectal cancer using invisible near-infrared fluorescence light.

Authors:  Merlijn Hutteman; Hak Soo Choi; J Sven D Mieog; Joost R van der Vorst; Yoshitomo Ashitate; Peter J K Kuppen; Marian C van Groningen; Clemens W G M Löwik; Vincent T H B M Smit; Cornelis J H van de Velde; John V Frangioni; Alexander L Vahrmeijer
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2010-11-16       Impact factor: 5.344

  4 in total

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