Christopher J Pannucci1, Patrick A Gerety2, Amber R Wang3, Paul Zhang3, Carolyn Mies3, Suhail K Kanchwala2. 1. Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT. christopher.pannucci@hsc.utah.edu. 2. Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA. 3. Department of Pathology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We performed cadaveric dissections to examine the feasibility of an internal mammary-based lymph node flap as a donor site for vascularized lymph node transfer. METHODS: Internal mammary vessels and adjacent nodes were dissected in ten fresh cadaver specimens. Surgeon inspection and palpation identified the number of nodes in the specimen. Specimens were examined macro- and microscopically by a pathologist for correlation of lymph node counts. Kappa statistic correlated surgeon- and pathologist-reported node counts. RESULTS: Surgeon- and pathologist-reported node counts were moderately correlated (kappa 0.57). Inspection and palpation correctly predicted node presence or absence in 80% of specimens. Sixty percent of flaps contained between 1 and 3 nodes, with a mean of 2.0 nodes when nodes were present. CONCLUSIONS: Inspection and palpation predicts the presence or absence of nodes in 80% of flaps. Nodes were present in 60% of internal mammary-based flaps, and one to three nodes can be transferred.
BACKGROUND: We performed cadaveric dissections to examine the feasibility of an internal mammary-based lymph node flap as a donor site for vascularized lymph node transfer. METHODS: Internal mammary vessels and adjacent nodes were dissected in ten fresh cadaver specimens. Surgeon inspection and palpation identified the number of nodes in the specimen. Specimens were examined macro- and microscopically by a pathologist for correlation of lymph node counts. Kappa statistic correlated surgeon- and pathologist-reported node counts. RESULTS: Surgeon- and pathologist-reported node counts were moderately correlated (kappa 0.57). Inspection and palpation correctly predicted node presence or absence in 80% of specimens. Sixty percent of flaps contained between 1 and 3 nodes, with a mean of 2.0 nodes when nodes were present. CONCLUSIONS: Inspection and palpation predicts the presence or absence of nodes in 80% of flaps. Nodes were present in 60% of internal mammary-based flaps, and one to three nodes can be transferred.