| Literature DB >> 35662824 |
Jonathan S O'Brien1,2,3,4, Jiasian Teh1,4, Brian D Kelly1,2, Kenneth Chen1,5, Todd Manning4,6, Marc Furrer3, Justin Chee7, Nathan Lawrentschuk1,3,8.
Abstract
Penile squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is a rare malignancy, which is known to invade local inguinal lymph nodes prior to progressing to the pelvis. Dynamic sentinel lymph node biopsy (DSLNB) is a standard for the minimally invasive assessment of lymphadenopathy in patients with subclinical groin metastasis. Hybrid 99mTc Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT-CT) has been shown to increase the accuracy of identifying first draining "sentinel" nodes (SN). Unilateral inguinal visualization on SPECT-CT is a rare presentation, which may increase the likelihood of a false negative SN biopsy. Retrospective analysis from three-penile cancer uro-oncologists in Melbourne, Australia identified 78 groins undergoing DSLNB for intermediate/high risk primary disease. Unilateral SPECT-CT results were observed in four patients suggesting a functional pattern of lymph diversion. Analysis confirmed malignancy (n = 2), sarcoidosis (n = 1), and evidence of local inflammation in SPECT-CT negative groins. Findings re-iterate the role of SPECT-CT a pre-operative adjunct. Experienced multimodal groin assessment using palpation, SPECT-CT, lymphoscintigraphy, and blue dye tracking remains paramount. Unilateral SN on pre-operative SPECT-CT in men with intermediate/high-risk penile SCC should elicit a higher degree of clinical suspicion. We recommend a low threshold for recommending radical inguinal lymph node dissection (ILND) for groins refractory to minimally invasive assessment.Entities:
Keywords: SPECT-CT; dynamic sentinel lymph node biopsy (DSLNB); minimally invasive surgeries (MIS); penile cancer; sentinel node (SN)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35662824 PMCID: PMC9157642 DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2022.882011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Surg ISSN: 2296-875X
Figure 1Imaging Overlay for Patient B. The primary penile lesion and left inguinal node is identified with radiotracer hold up at the base of the penis using (A) 18FDG PET-CT, (B) conventional CT, (C) 3-dimensional digital reconstruction amalgamating information from all imaging modalities, and (D) 99mTc-lymphoscintogram.
Patient Outline.
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| A | 65–70 | SCC pT2 | – | – | – | – | + | – | + | + | + | + | 1/1 | 1/1 | 6/10 | 4/12 | ||
| B | 70–75 | SCC pT1b | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | + | – | + | – | + | 1/2 | 2/13 | 7/20 | |
| C | 75–80 | SCC pT1b | – | – | – | – | + | – | – | + | – | + | 0/1 | – | – | |||
| D | 55–60 | SCC pT2 | + | + | + | + | + | – | + | + | + | + | 0/1 | 0/3 | ||||
Figure 2Artistic rendering of re-routed lymphatic drainage.
Summary of SN non-visualization.
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| Current study | 41 | 78 | 4 (5) | DSLNB | 1/2 1/1 – | 0/2 | 42 |
| Sahdev et al. ( | 166 | 332 | 20 (12) | Re-attempt DSLNB | 0/6 0/8 – | 0/6 | 36 41.5 |
| Kirrander et al. ( | 55 | 111 | 22 (44) | Exploration | 1/3 1/5 – | N/A | 21 (median) |
| Kroon et al. ( | 123 | 246 | 23 | Exploration | 1/8 – | 0/8 | 52 (median) |
2 patients had bilateral non-visualization (n = 4) and data was pooled in further analysis.