Frozen section diagnosis for axillary sentinel lymph nodes: The first six years

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Abstract

Intraoperative frozen section of axillary lymph nodes for the detection of metastatic breast cancer has been controversial because of the labor-intensive techniques necessary to obtain a highly sensitive test, and because of the uncertain significance of frequently detected submicrometastatic carcinoma. In total, 874 consecutive axillary sentinel lymph node cases examined by intraoperative frozen section over a 6-year period were reviewed retrospectively. Frozen section had a sensitivity of 60% and was 100% specific, but when cases with submicrometastatic tumor cells were considered negative, the sensitivity rose to 83%. Rare cases were called 'atypical' on frozen section; almost all of these cases were negative for carcinoma on permanent sections.

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APA

Mitchell, M. L. (2005). Frozen section diagnosis for axillary sentinel lymph nodes: The first six years. Modern Pathology, 18(1), 58–61. https://doi.org/10.1038/modpathol.3800279

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