Impact of non-axillary sentinel node biopsy on staging and treatment of breast cancer patients

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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the occurrence of lymphatic drainage to non-axillary sentinel nodes and to determine the implications of this phenomenon. A total of 549 breast cancer patients underwent lymphoscintigraphy after intratumoural injection of 99mTc-nanocolloid. The sentinel node was intraoperatively identified with the aid of intratumoural administered patent blue dye and a gamma-ray detection probe. Histopathological examination of sentinel nodes included step-sectioning at six levels and immunohistochemical staining. A sentinel node outside level I or II of the axilla was found in 149 patients (27%): internal mammary sentinel nodes in 86 patients, other non-axillary sentinel nodes in 44 and both internal mammary and other non-axillary sentinel nodes in nineteen patients. The intra-operative identification rate was 80%. Internal mammary metastases were found in seventeen patients and metastases in other non-axillary sentinel nodes in ten patients. Staging improved in 13% of patients with non-axillary sentinel lymph nodes and their treatment strategy was changed in 17%. A small proportion of clinically node negative breast cancer patients can be staged more precisely by biopsy of sentinel nodes outside level I and II of the axilla, resulting in additional decision criteria for postoperative regional or systemic therapy. © 2002 Cancer Research UK.

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Tanis, P. J., Nieweg, O. E., Valdés Olmos, R. A., Peterse, J. L., Rutgers, E. J. T., Hoefnagel, C. A., & Kroon, B. B. R. (2002). Impact of non-axillary sentinel node biopsy on staging and treatment of breast cancer patients. British Journal of Cancer, 87(7), 705–710. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6600359

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