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Minimally invasive breast carcinoma staging using lymphatic mapping with radiolabeled dextran.

Authors :
Offodile R
Hoh C
Barsky SH
Nelson SD
Elashoff R
Eilber FR
Economou JS
Nguyen M
Source :
Cancer [Cancer] 1998 May 01; Vol. 82 (9), pp. 1704-8.
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

Background: The sentinel lymph node is defined as the first lymph node to receive drainage from a primary tumor. Based on this concept, the authors set out to evaluate whether the status of the sentinel lymph node can accurately predict whether breast tumor cells have metastasized to the axillary lymphatic basin.<br />Methods: Radiolabeled dextran was injected into the site of the breast tumor. In the operating room, a portable gamma detector probe was used to identify the exact location of the sentinel lymph node(s). After identifying and excising the radioactive sentinel lymph node specimens, a routine axillary lymph node dissection was performed. All lymph nodes were then subjected to hematoxylin and eosin (H & E) staining, and the sentinel lymph nodes were subjected to additional cytokeratin immunohistochemistry.<br />Results: Of the 41 patients who participated in the study, 18 had tumor metastasis to their axillary lymph nodes. In all 18 of these cases, the sentinel lymph node(s) contained cancer detected by either H & E staining or cytokeratin immunohistochemistry.<br />Conclusions: The status of the sentinel lymph node(s) appears to predict accurately whether breast tumor cells have metastasized to the axillary lymphatic basin. This new, minimally invasive technique for staging breast carcinoma should be further validated in a large, multi-institutional clinical trial.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0008-543X
Volume :
82
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9576292