| Literature DB >> 22295211 |
Anastasia Pazaiti1, Ian S Fentiman.
Abstract
Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is a safe and accurate minimally invasive method for detecting axillary lymph node (ALN) involvement in the clinically negative axilla thereby reducing morbidity in patients who avoid unnecessary axillary lymph node dissection (ALND). Although current guidelines recommend completion ALND when macro- and micrometastatic diseases are identified by SLNB, the benefit of this surgical intervention is under debate. Additionally, the management of the axilla in the presence of isolated tumour cells (ITCs) in SLNB is questioned. Particularly controversial is the prognostic significance of minimal SLNB metastasis in relation to local recurrence and overall survival. Preliminary results of the recently published Z0011 trial suggest similar outcomes after SNB or ALND when the SN is positive, but this finding has to be interpreted with caution.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22295211 PMCID: PMC3262558 DOI: 10.4061/2011/195892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Breast Cancer ISSN: 2090-3189
Recommendations of SLNB, ALND, and treatment after SLNB.
| SLNB | ALND | Post-SLNB | |
|---|---|---|---|
| T1, T2 tumour | T3, T4 tumours | SLNB +ve | ALND |
| Multicentric tumour | Inflammatory carcinoma | SLNB −ve | Observe |
| DCIS for mastectomy | Suspicious axillary node | Micromets | ALND |
| DCIS > 5 cm | Pregnancy | ITC | Observe |
| Older patient | Prior axillary surgery | SLNB +ve, 1-2 nodes, T1, T2 | Observe* |
| Preneoadjuvant | |||
DCIS: ductal carcinoma-in-situ; SNB: sentinel lymph node biopsy; ALND: axillary lymph node dissection.
*Recommendation of the German guidelines.
Incidence and prognostic impact of ITCs in sentinel node biopsies.
| Author | Total | ITC (%) | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Herbert et al. [ | 514 | 16 (3%) | No effect |
| Reed et al. [ | 1255 | 25 (2%) | No effect |
| De Boer et al. [ | 2707 | 819 | HR 1.5 (No adjuvant versus adjuvant) |
| Barbosa et al. [ | 1000 | 43 (4%) | No effect |
| Andersson et al. [ | 3369 | 107 (3%) | No effect |
| Leidenius et al. [ | 1390 | 63 (5%) | Reduced 5-year survival |
| Maaskant-Braat et al. [ | 6803 | 126 (2%) | No effect |
Studies of patients with micrometastases not treated by completion mastectomy.
| Author | Total | Follow-up (months) | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fan et al. [ | 27 | 17 | 1 recurrence |
| Nagashima et al. [ | 19 | 24 | 1 recurrence |
| Yegiyants et al. [ | 33 | 84 | 1 recurrence |
| Fournier et al. [ | 16 | 30 | No recurrence |
| Langer et al. [ | 27 | 77 | No recurrence |
| Meretoja et al. [ | 48 | 37 | 3 recurrences, 1 death |
| Pernas et al. [ | 45 | 60 | 1 recurrence |
| Reed et al. [ | 57 | 59 | Significantly reduced disease-free interval |
Major prognostic factors for non-SLN metastases in patients with minimal SLN metastases.
| Feature | Author |
|---|---|
| Lymphovascular invasion | Mittendorf et al. [ |
|
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| Size of SLN metastases | Barbosa et al. [ |
|
| |
| Primary tumour size | Barbosa et al. [ |
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| Lobular histology | Mittendorf et al. [ |
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| Number of positive SLN | Barbosa et al. [ |
Validation studies comparing OSNA with histopathology.
| Author | Total | Concordance | Sensitivity | Specificity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tsujimoto et al. [ | 101 | 98% | 91% | 100% |
| Schem et al. [ | 93 | 92% | 98% | 91% |
| Tamaki et al. [ | 185 | 93% | 88% | 94% |
| Snook et al. [ | 204 | 96% | 92% | 97% |
| Feldman et al. [ | 498 | 96% | 78% | 96% |