Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy in Breast Cancer

Umberto Veronesi(European Institute of Oncology), Giuseppe Viale(University of Milan), Giovanni Paganelli(European Institute of Oncology), Stefano Zurrida(University of Milan), Alberto Luini(European Institute of Oncology), Viviana Galimberti(European Institute of Oncology), Paolo Veronesi(European Institute of Oncology), Mattia Intra(European Institute of Oncology), Patrick Maisonneuve(European Institute of Oncology), Francesca Zucca(European Institute of Oncology), Giovanna Gatti(European Institute of Oncology), Giovanni Mazzarol(European Institute of Oncology), Concetta De Cicco(European Institute of Oncology), Dario Vezzoli(European Institute of Oncology)
Annals of Surgery
March 19, 2010
Cited by 546

Abstract

In Brief Objective: Sentinel node biopsy (SNB) is widely used to stage the axilla in breast cancer. We present 10-year follow-up of our single-institute trial designed to compare outcomes in patients who received no axillary dissection if the sentinel node was negative, with patients who received complete axillary dissection. Methods: From March 1998 to December 1999, 516 patients with primary breast cancer up to 2 cm in pathologic diameter were randomized either to SNB plus complete axillary dissection (AD arm) or to SNB with axillary dissection only if the sentinel node contained metastases (SN arm). Results: The 2 arms were well-balanced for number of sentinel nodes found, proportion of positive sentinel nodes, and all other tumor and patient characteristics. About 8 patients in the AD arm had false-negative SNs on histologic analysis: a similar number (8, 95% CI: 3–15) of patients with axillary involvement was expected in SN arm patients who did not receive axillary dissection; but only 2 cases of overt axillary metastasis occurred. There were 23 breast cancer-related events in the SN arm and 26 in the AD arm (log-rank, P = 0.52), while overall survival was greater in the SN arm (log-rank, P = 0.15). Conclusions: Preservation of healthy lymph nodes may have beneficial consequences. Axillary dissection should not be performed in breast cancer patients without first examining the sentinel node. In this study, we present 10-year follow-up of our trial to compare no axillary dissection if sentinel node biopsy was negative, with complete axillary dissection, show an exceptionally low rate of axillary metastases, and slightly better survival in the no axillary dissection arm. Sentinel node biopsy is as good as axillary dissection in staging the axilla.


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