AIMS: An increasing number of surgeons perform sentinel node biopsy to identify melanoma patients with early lymphatic dissemination who may benefit from regional node dissection or adjuvant therapy. The addition of lymphoscintigraphy and intraoperative gamma-ray detection with a hand-held probe increases the sensitivity of the surgical technique substantially. METHODS: The value of lymphoscintigraphy is discussed. The operative technique of lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy is described, including the use of a vital dye and a gamma-ray probe. CONCLUSIONS: Close to 100% of first-tier lymph nodes can be identified with this combined approach without the unnecessary removal of too many higher-echelon nodes.
AIMS: An increasing number of surgeons perform sentinel node biopsy to identify melanomapatients with early lymphatic dissemination who may benefit from regional node dissection or adjuvant therapy. The addition of lymphoscintigraphy and intraoperative gamma-ray detection with a hand-held probe increases the sensitivity of the surgical technique substantially. METHODS: The value of lymphoscintigraphy is discussed. The operative technique of lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy is described, including the use of a vital dye and a gamma-ray probe. CONCLUSIONS: Close to 100% of first-tier lymph nodes can be identified with this combined approach without the unnecessary removal of too many higher-echelon nodes.
Authors: Christina Bluemel; Ken Herrmann; Francesco Giammarile; Omgo E Nieweg; Julien Dubreuil; Alessandro Testori; Riccardo A Audisio; Odysseas Zoras; Michael Lassmann; Annette H Chakera; Roger Uren; Sotirios Chondrogiannis; Patrick M Colletti; Domenico Rubello Journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging Date: 2015-07-25 Impact factor: 9.236