380 results on '"Interpectoral nodes"'
Search Results
2. Normal interpectoral nodes (ultrasound)
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Knipe, Henry, primary and Baratelli, Giorgio, additional
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- 2021
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3. Normal interpectoral nodes (ultrasound)
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Henry Knipe and Giorgio Baratelli
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Interpectoral Nodes as the Initial Site of Recurrence in Breast Cancer
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Komenaka, Ian K., Bauer, Valerie P., Schnabel, Freya R., Joseph, Kathie-Ann, Horowitz, Elizabeth, Ditkoff, Beth-Ann, and El-Tamer, Mahmoud B.
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- 2004
5. Interpectoral nodes metastases in breast cancer
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Xiao-yu Liu, Xin Zhou, Jia-xiang Yang, Ning-sheng Zhu, and Ge-li Jiang
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Interpectoral nodes ,Metastasis ,Breast cancer ,Internal medicine ,Medicine public health ,medicine ,Clinical significance ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,business - Abstract
Objective To study interpectoral nodes metastasis rate in breast cancer and its clinical significance.
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- 2008
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6. The importance of interpectoral nodes in breast cancer
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J.M. Dixon, Udi Chetty, and V. Dobie
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Adult ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mammary gland ,Breast Neoplasms ,Interpectoral nodes ,Pectoralis Muscles ,Breast cancer ,medicine ,Axillary nodes ,Humans ,Aged ,Nodal involvement ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Axilla ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Lymph Node Excision ,Female ,Lymph Nodes ,Level iii ,Radiology ,business - Abstract
In a consecutive series of 73 patients undergoing a level III axillary clearance, interpectoral nodes were sought and, if palpable, excised. 18 interpectoral nodes were identified in 15 patients, 10 (14%) of whom had involved and 5 of whom had uninvolved interpectoral nodes. 7 of the 10 patients with involved interpectoral nodes also had axillary node involvement, but 3 patients had positive interpectoral nodes in the absence of involved axillary nodes. A comparison of patient and tumour characteristics in the groups of patients with and without interpectoral node involvement showed that patients who had involved interpectoral nodes were significantly younger and had significantly larger tumours. Interpectoral node involvement by breast cancer is not uncommon and these nodes can be involved in the absence of axillary nodal involvement. They should be looked for, and if identified, excised during axillary clearance.
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- 1993
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7. Are interpectoral nodes worth exploring in breast cancer surgery?
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Stefano Zurrida, M. Merson, V. Galimbert, Marco Greco, and P. Barbieri
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Interpectoral lymph nodes ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Modified Radical Mastectomy ,medicine.disease ,Interpectoral nodes ,Surgery ,Axilla ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Breast cancer ,medicine ,Level iii ,Lymph ,business ,Quadrantectomy - Abstract
From June to December 1990, 110 consecutive patients with breast cancer underwent a modified radical mastectomy (n=33) or quadrantectomy (n=77) combined with a complete axillary dissection and removal or interpectoral lymphatic tissue. The average number of lymph nodes removed from the axilla and interpectoral region was 22: 12.5 at Level I, 6.4 at Level II, 3.7 at Level III and 1.5 from the interpectoral tissue. In 59 110 patients fatty tissue only was found in the interpectoral region and in the remaining 51 patients, interpectoral lymph nodes were identified and these were involved in 22 patients (37.3% of total group). In 3 patients these were the only nodes involved. During axillary dissection the interpectoral space should be explored and palpable interpectoral nodes removed and submitted for histology.
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- 1992
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8. Can interpectoral nodes be sentinel nodes?
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Bale, Asha, Gardner, Bernard, Shende, Manisha, and Fromowitz, Frank
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- 1999
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9. Interpectoral nodes in carcinoma of the breast: Requiem or resurrection
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Shashank R. Shinde and Rajiv Y. Chandawarkar
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General Medicine ,Fascia ,Modified Radical Mastectomy ,medicine.disease ,Neurovascular bundle ,Surgery ,Metastasis ,Dissection ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,business ,Lymph node ,Mastectomy - Abstract
Fifty-eight consecutive patients undergoing a modified radical mastectomy were subjected to complete dissection and pathological assessment of the interpectoral fascia and the group of lymph nodes it contains. The dissection was carried out in all patients, irrespective of whether they were palpable or not. Interpectoral nodes (IPNs) were anatomically present in 28 patients (48%) and were completely absent in 30 patients (52%). Ten patients were Stage I, 18 were Stage II, and 30 were Stage III. Of the 25% (15/58) of patients with microscopic metastasis, only 12/15 had palpable nodes; 66% (10/15) of patients had axillary and apical nodes positive. Significantly, two patients with negative nodes in the axillary and apical group had metastatic Rotter's nodes. Of the 15 patients with positive IPNs, nine had primary tumors located within the upper quadrants of the breast, whereas only five had tumors in lower quadrants and one had a centrally located tumor. The neurovascular bundle to the pectoralis major could be safely preserved in 93% (54/58) of patients. The incidence of impalpable nodes with microscopic metastasis and the evidence of exclusively metastatic interpectoral nodes with uninvolved axillary and apical nodes prompt the following conclusions: (1) interpectoral fascia and nodes should be mandatorily dissected in all patients irrespective of the nodes being palpable or not; (2) the dissection is anatomic and is associated with almost no additional morbidity; (3) the group of patients with IPNs positive and the axillary group negative, would benefit maximally from the IPN dissection. Similarly, this dissection in all other groups of patients would enable a more accurate staging and selection of therapeutic strategies.
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- 1996
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10. Can interpectoral nodes be sentinel nodes?
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Manisha R. Shende, Asha Bale, Frank Fromowitz, and Bernard Gardner
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biopsy ,Mammary gland ,Breast Neoplasms ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Metastasis ,Breast cancer ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Lymph node ,False Negative Reactions ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Sentinel node ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Axilla ,Dissection ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Lymph Node Excision ,Female ,Radiology ,Lymph Nodes ,business - Abstract
Background: This study was designed to determine if interpectoral nodes could be sentinel nodes for some breast cancers. Methods: Thirty-five consecutive breast cancer patients undergoing axillary node dissection had a dissection of the interpectoral nodes. These were sent to pathology as a separate specimen. Results: Three patients were identified with isolated interpectoral nodal metastasis. Conclusion: In upper quadrants or deep breast cancers the interpectoral nodes may be the earliest site of nodal metastasis. This may lead to false negative results in some sentinel node biopsies.
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- 1999
11. Interpectoral nodes in carcinoma of the breast: requiem or resurrection
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R Y, Chandawarkar and S R, Shinde
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Adult ,Carcinoma ,Breast Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Fasciotomy ,Pectoralis Muscles ,Mastectomy, Modified Radical ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Humans ,Lymph Node Excision ,Female ,Lymph Nodes ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging - Abstract
Fifty-eight consecutive patients undergoing a modified radical mastectomy were subjected to complete dissection and pathological assessment of the interpectoral fascia and the group of lymph nodes it contains. The dissection was carried out in all patients, irrespective of whether they were palpable or not. Interpectoral nodes (IPNs) were anatomically present in 28 patients (48%) and were completely absent in 30 patients (52%). Ten patients were Stage I, 18 were Stage II, and 30 were Stage III. Of the 25% (15/58) of patients with microscopic metastasis, only 12/15 had palpable nodes; 66% (10/15) of patients had axillary and apical nodes positive. Significantly, two patients with negative nodes in the axillary and apical group had metastatic Rotter's nodes. Of the 15 patients with positive IPNs, nine had primary tumors located within the upper quadrants of the breast, whereas only five had tumors in lower quadrants and one had a centrally located tumor. The neurovascular bundle to the pectoralis major could be safely preserved in 93% (54/58) of patients. The incidence of impalpable nodes with microscopic metastasis and the evidence of exclusively metastatic interpectoral nodes with uninvolved axillary and apical nodes prompt the following conclusions: (1) interpectoral fascia and nodes should be mandatorily dissected in all patients irrespective of the nodes being palpable or not; (2) the dissection is anatomic and is associated with almost no additional morbidity; (3) the group of patients with IPNs positive and the axillary group negative, would benefit maximally from the IPN dissection. Similarly, this dissection in all other groups of patients would enable a more accurate staging and selection of therapeutic strategies.
- Published
- 1996
12. Interpectoral nodes in carcinoma of the breast: requiem or resurrection.
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Chandawarkar RY and Shinde SR
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- Adult, Aged, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Carcinoma pathology, Fasciotomy, Female, Humans, Lymph Node Excision, Lymph Nodes pathology, Lymphatic Metastasis, Mastectomy, Modified Radical, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Pectoralis Muscles surgery, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Carcinoma surgery, Lymph Nodes surgery
- Abstract
Fifty-eight consecutive patients undergoing a modified radical mastectomy were subjected to complete dissection and pathological assessment of the interpectoral fascia and the group of lymph nodes it contains. The dissection was carried out in all patients, irrespective of whether they were palpable or not. Interpectoral nodes (IPNs) were anatomically present in 28 patients (48%) and were completely absent in 30 patients (52%). Ten patients were Stage I, 18 were Stage II, and 30 were Stage III. Of the 25% (15/58) of patients with microscopic metastasis, only 12/15 had palpable nodes; 66% (10/15) of patients had axillary and apical nodes positive. Significantly, two patients with negative nodes in the axillary and apical group had metastatic Rotter's nodes. Of the 15 patients with positive IPNs, nine had primary tumors located within the upper quadrants of the breast, whereas only five had tumors in lower quadrants and one had a centrally located tumor. The neurovascular bundle to the pectoralis major could be safely preserved in 93% (54/58) of patients. The incidence of impalpable nodes with microscopic metastasis and the evidence of exclusively metastatic interpectoral nodes with uninvolved axillary and apical nodes prompt the following conclusions: (1) interpectoral fascia and nodes should be mandatorily dissected in all patients irrespective of the nodes being palpable or not; (2) the dissection is anatomic and is associated with almost no additional morbidity; (3) the group of patients with IPNs positive and the axillary group negative, would benefit maximally from the IPN dissection. Similarly, this dissection in all other groups of patients would enable a more accurate staging and selection of therapeutic strategies.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
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13. The importance of interpectoral nodes in breast cancer.
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Dixon JM, Dobie V, and Chetty U
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- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Axilla, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Female, Humans, Lymph Node Excision, Middle Aged, Pectoralis Muscles, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Lymph Nodes pathology
- Abstract
In a consecutive series of 73 patients undergoing a level III axillary clearance, interpectoral nodes were sought and, if palpable, excised. 18 interpectoral nodes were identified in 15 patients, 10 (14%) of whom had involved and 5 of whom had uninvolved interpectoral nodes. 7 of the 10 patients with involved interpectoral nodes also had axillary node involvement, but 3 patients had positive interpectoral nodes in the absence of involved axillary nodes. A comparison of patient and tumour characteristics in the groups of patients with and without interpectoral node involvement showed that patients who had involved interpectoral nodes were significantly younger and had significantly larger tumours. Interpectoral node involvement by breast cancer is not uncommon and these nodes can be involved in the absence of axillary nodal involvement. They should be looked for, and if identified, excised during axillary clearance.
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- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Interpectoral Nodes as the Initial Site of Recurrence in Breast Cancer
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Kathie-Ann Joseph, Beth-Ann Ditkoff, Elizabeth Horowitz, Mahmoud El-Tamer, Ian K. Komenaka, Valerie P. Bauer, and Freya Schnabel
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Breast imaging ,Breast surgery ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast Neoplasms ,Malignancy ,Risk Assessment ,Preoperative care ,Pectoralis Muscles ,Breast cancer ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,Registries ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Biopsy, Needle ,Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast ,Cancer ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,Sentinel node ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Surgery ,Carcinoma, Intraductal, Noninfiltrating ,Lymph Node Excision ,Female ,Lymph Nodes ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Hypothesis Interpectoral nodes can be the initial site of recurrent breast cancer. Design Retrospective review. Setting Comprehensive breast center, located in a university-based tertiary care center. Patients All patients undergoing operations for breast cancer at our breast center from 1995 to 2002 were reviewed. Main Outcome Measures Patients with interpectoral node recurrence as the initial site of recurrent breast cancer were identified. Results During the 8-year period, 4097 patients underwent surgical management for breast cancer. During this time, 4 patients (0.1%) had recurrence at the interpectoral nodes. Three of the 4 patients were node-negative at the original operation. All lesions were mammographically occult. Preoperative needle biopsy was effective in the confirmation of malignancy. All 4 underwent excision without complications. Conclusions Recurrence at the interpectoral nodes can be the initial site of surgical failure. These nodes may represent the site of primary drainage in a percentage of patients. The sentinel node identification technique, therefore, should diminish the number of patients affected by recurrence at this site. In patients with a palpable mass in the infraclavicular location, however, a high index of suspicion should be maintained. Workup should include additional breast imaging and needle biopsy prior to operation.
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- 2004
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15. Are interpectoral nodes worth exploring in breast cancer surgery?
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Greco, M., primary, Galimbert, V., additional, Zurrida, S., additional, Merson, M., additional, and Barbieri, P., additional
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- 1992
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16. Lymphatic Spread of Mammary Carcinoma: Role of non-interpectoral lymph nodes on dorsal surface of pectoralis major muscle and of interpectoral nodes
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Hultborn, A., Hultén, L., Roos, B., Rosencrantz, M., Rosengren, B., and Åhrén, Ch.
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- 1971
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17. Lymphatic spread of mammary carcinoma. Role of non-interpectoral lymph nodes on dorsal surface of pectoralis major muscle and of interpectoral nodes
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B. Roos, M. Rosencrantz, B. Rosengren, Leif Hultén, Ch. Åhrén, and A. Hultborn
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Dorsum ,Interpectoral lymph nodes ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pectoralis major muscle ,Lymphography ,Breast Neoplasms ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Gold Isotopes ,Interpectoral nodes ,Pectoralis Muscles ,Mammary carcinoma ,Lymphatic Spread ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,medicine ,Humans ,Lymph Nodes ,business ,Pectoralis Muscle ,Mastectomy - Published
- 1971
18. Lymphatic spread of mammary carcinoma. Role of non-interpectoral lymph nodes on dorsal surface of pectoralis major muscle and of interpectoral nodes.
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Hultborn A, Hultén L, Roos B, Rosencrantz M, Rosengren B, and Ahrén C
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- Breast Neoplasms surgery, Gold Isotopes, Humans, Lymphography, Mastectomy, Pectoralis Muscles surgery, Breast Neoplasms physiopathology, Lymph Nodes physiopathology, Lymphatic Metastasis
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- 1971
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19. Unicentric castleman's disease of interpectoral (rotter's) lymph nodes mimicking a breast tumor
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Nikolaos S. Salemis
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Castleman Disease ,Breast Neoplasms ,Disease ,Interpectoral nodes ,Breast tumor ,Oncology ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Surgery ,Female ,Radiology ,Lymph Nodes ,business ,Rotter's lymph nodes - Published
- 2020
20. Rotter's Lymph Nodes—Do We Really Need to Remove During Axillary Clearance?
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Keelara, Arun Gowda, Satish, C., Rudresh, H. K., Harish, K., and Kapali, A. S.
- Abstract
Surgical management of node positive breast cancer requires axillary dissection. Interpectoral nodes (IPNs) or Rotter's nodes removal is controversial as there is hardly any tissue in this region. IPNs involvement is rarely seen among breast cancer patients. Developing an effective protocol for surgical management of axilla is necessary for uniformity, to reduce the risk of regional recurrence and to avoid the morbidity of interpectoral lymphatic tissue clearance. This study aimed to evaluate the detection of lymph nodes in Rotter's region and positive metastasis rate of IPNs in patients with node positive breast cancer for analyzing the prognostic and therapeutic value of IPN excision during axillary clearance. Fifty-six patients undergoing axillary clearance, aged ≥ 18 years, were studied. Patients with recurrence or those who underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy were excluded. Baseline investigations were done pre-operatively along with core needle biopsy, estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and Ki-67 status. Association between IPN status, age, and clinicopathological parameters were assessed by Kruskal Wallis and Chi-square test using R v 3.6.0. P value of ≤ 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Majority of patients had upper outer quadrant tumor location (22/56), and the most common histopathological type was invasive ductal carcinoma (46/56). IPNs were identified in 35.71% (20/56) of 56 patients, with metastasis prevalence of 27.27% (9/33 node positive patients). Patients having IPN metastasis had larger tumor size, later TNM classification, lower ER/PR, and higher Ki-67 positivity. Dissection of IPNs can be practiced routinely during axillary clearance and should be subjected to histopathological examination separately. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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21. Ultrasonographic detection of interpectoral (Rotter's) node involvement in breast cancer
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Ismail Oran, Ayşenur Memiş, and Esin Emin Ustun
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mammary gland ,Breast Neoplasms ,Modified Radical Mastectomy ,Ultrasonographic examination ,Interpectoral nodes ,Metastasis ,Breast cancer ,Mastectomy, Modified Radical ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Lymph node ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Axilla ,Female ,Radiology ,Lymph Nodes ,Ultrasonography, Mammary ,business ,Breast carcinoma - Abstract
Prospectively, ultrasonographic examination of the interpectoral space was performed in 185 patients with clinical and/or mammographic evidence/suspicion of breast carcinoma. Of these, 86 patients treated by modified radical mastectomy were included in the study. Interpectoral lymph node metastases were found histopathologically in 12 (14%) of patients. Ultrasonographic examination of the interpectoral space revealed enlarged Rotter's node in 4 (4.6%) of patients, and 33.3% of patients with involved interpectoral nodes. Therefore, one-third of interpectoral node involvement could be detected ultrasonographically in this group. This sonographic study represents the first report on the interpectoral region with special attention to Rotter's node.
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- 1996
22. An Improved Technique for the Study of Lymph Nodes in Surgical Specimens
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C. D. Haagensen and Kevin Durkin
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Columbia laboratory ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Histological Techniques ,Pectoral muscle ,Breast Neoplasms ,Interpectoral nodes ,Resection ,Surgery ,Surgical pathology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,medicine ,Humans ,Lymph Node Excision ,Female ,Lymph Nodes ,Lymph ,business ,Lymph node ,Mastectomy ,Radical mastectomy ,Research Article - Abstract
The importance of the meticulous study by pathologists of the lymph nodes in surgical specimens is emphasized. Most pathologists identify only a small proportion of the lymph nodes in these specimens and valuable prognostic information is lost. Data illustrating the evolution in the Columbia Laboratory of surgical pathology of methods used to study surgical lymph node specimens over a 44-year period (1935--1979) are reviewed. An improved method of clearing the specimens of axillary dissections in radical mastectomy finds more lymph nodes and more metastases, and greatly shortens the time required for clearing. The importance of identifying metastases in the interpectoral nodes is emphasized. In a special study with our new clearing technique metastases were found in the interpectoral nodes in 19% of the radical mastectomy specimens. These nodes are not removed in the modified operation, which does not include resection of the pectoral muscles. The opportunity to cure a substantial proportion of patients is thus lost.
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- 1980
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23. Sonographic localisation of lymph nodes suspicious of metastatic breast cancer to surgical axillary levels.
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Fenech M, Burke T, Arnett G, Tanner A, and Werder N
- Abstract
The axillary lymph node (LN) burden of breast cancer patients guides multidisciplinary management and treatment regimes. Sonographic imaging is used to identify the presence, number and location of axillary LNs suspicious of malignancy and used to guide nodal fine needle aspirations and biopsies. Axillary LNs suspicious of harbouring breast cancer metastasis can be localised to three surgical axillary levels, numbered according to their location relative to the pectoralis minor muscle and lymph flow. To sonographically identify and localise suspicious axillary LNs, an understanding of the axillary anatomy, muscular sonographic landmarks, surgical axillary levels, and the sonographic technique to image and distinguish between benign and suspicious LNs is required., (© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of Medical Radiation Sciences published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australian Society of Medical Imaging and Radiation Therapy and New Zealand Institute of Medical Radiation Technology.)
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- 2024
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24. Merits of Level III Axillary Dissection in Node-Positive Breast Cancer: A Prospective, Single-Institution Study From India.
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Joshi, Shalaka, Noronha, Jarin, Hawaldar, Rohini, Kundgulwar, Girish, Vanmali, Vaibhav, Parmar, Vani, Nair, Nita, Shet, Tanuja, and Badwe, Rajendra
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AXILLARY lymph node dissection , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *HORMONE receptors , *PROGRESSION-free survival , *BREAST cancer , *BREAST cancer patients - Abstract
PURPOSE: A complete axillary lymph node (ALN) dissection is therapeutic in node-positive breast cancer. Presently, there is no international consensus regarding anatomic levels to be addressed in complete axillary dissection. We assessed the burden of disease in level III axilla. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A prospectively maintained database was assessed for 1,591 consecutive patients with nonmetastatic breast cancer registered at Tata Memorial Center, Mumbai, between January 2009 and December 2014. RESULTS: A median of four (zero to 20) level III ALNs were dissected and a median of two (one to 17) nodes were positive. A total of 27.3% (434 of 1,591) patients had level III ALN metastasis, and 4.7% of patients had positive interpectoral nodes. Some 53.2% of patients had level III metastases in the presence of four or more positive level I and II ALNs. A total of 9.4% of patients had level III involvement when one to three ALNs were positive in level I and II (P <.001). Some 53.2% of patients had level III metastases in the presence of four or more positive level I and II ALNs. On logistic regression analysis, four or more positive ALNs in level I or II (P <.001), inner/central quadrant tumor location (P =.013), and perinodal extension (P <.001) were associated with level III ALN involvement. At a median follow-up of 36 months, the disease-free survival was significantly worse for level III ALN metastases on univariate analysis (P <.001). On multivariate Cox regression analysis, histologic grade (P =.006), four or more positive ALNs (P <.001), hormone receptor status (P <.001), and tumor size (P =.037) were independent prognostic factors for disease-free survival. CONCLUSION: The axillary nodal burden is high in patients with breast cancer in developing countries like India. One of two women with four or more positive level I and II ALNs may have residual disease in level III if it is not cleared during surgery. Intraoperative interpectoral space clearance should be considered in the presence of either palpable interpectoral lymph nodes or multiple positive ALNs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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25. Adjuvant medial versus entire supraclavicular lymph node irradiation in high-risk early breast cancer (SUCLANODE): a protocol for a multicenter, randomized, open-label, phase 3 trial.
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Zhang, Li, Mei, Xin, Hu, Zhigang, Yu, Bo, Zhang, Chaoyang, Li, Yong, Liu, Kaitai, Ma, Xuejun, Ma, Jinli, Chen, Xingxing, Meng, Jin, Shi, Wei, Wang, Xiaofang, Mo, Miao, Shao, Zhimin, Zhang, Zhen, Yu, Xiaoli, Guo, Xiaomao, and Yang, Zhaozhi
- Subjects
TUMOR classification ,CLINICAL trials ,VOLUMETRIC-modulated arc therapy ,BREAST cancer ,BREAST cancer surgery ,LYMPH nodes - Abstract
Background: Supraclavicular nodal (SCL) irradiation is commonly used for patients with high-risk breast cancer after breast surgery. The Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) and European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology (ESTRO) breast contouring atlases delineate the medial part of the SCL region, while excluding the posterolateral part. However, recent studies have found that a substantial proportion of SCL failures are located in the posterolateral SCL region, outside of the RTOG/ESTRO-defined SCL target volumes. Consequently, many radiation oncologists advocate for enlarging the SCL irradiation target volume to include both the medial and posterolateral SCL regions. Nevertheless, it remains uncertain whether adding the posterolateral SCL irradiation improves survival outcomes for high-risk breast cancer patients. Methods: The SUCLANODE trial is an open-label, multicenter, randomized, phase 3 trial comparing the efficacy and adverse events of medial SCL irradiation (M-SCLI group) and medial plus posterolateral SCL irradiation (entire SCL irradiation, E-SCLI group) in high-risk breast cancer patients who underwent breast conserving-surgery or mastectomy. Patients with pathological N2-3b disease following initial surgery, or clinical stage III or pathological N1-3b if receiving neoadjuvant systemic therapy, are eligible and randomly assigned (1:1) to M-SCLI group and E-SCLI group. Stratification is by chemotherapy sequence (neoadjuvant vs. adjuvant), T stage (T3-4 vs. T1-2), N stage (N1-2 vs. N3), and ER status (positive vs. negative). Other radiation volumes are identical in the two arms, including breast/chest wall, undissected axillary lymph node, and internal mammary node. Advanced intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT), or tomotherapy techniques are recommended. Both hypofractionated and conventional fractionation schedules are permitted. The primary end point is invasive disease-free survival, and secondary end points included overall survival, SCL recurrence, local-regional recurrence, distance recurrence, safety outcome, and patient-reported outcomes. The target sample size is 1650 participants. Discussion: The results of the SUCLANODE trial will provide high-level evidence regarding whether adding posterolateral SCL irradiation to medial SCL target volume provides survival benefit in patients with high-risk breast cancer. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05059379. Registered 28 September 2021, https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05059379. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Tata Memorial Centre Evidence Based Management of Breast cancer.
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Wadasadawala, Tabassum, Joshi, Shalaka, Rath, Sushmita, Popat, Palak, Sahay, Ayushi, Gulia, Seema, Bhargava, Prabhat, Krishnamurthy, Revathy, Hoysal, Dileep, Shah, Jessicka, Engineer, Mitchelle, Bajpai, Jyoti, Kothari, Bhavika, Pathak, Rima, Jaiswal, Dushyant, Desai, Sangeeta, Shet, Tanuja, Patil, Asawari, Pai, Trupti, and Haria, Purvi
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BREAST cancer ,INDIAN women (Asians) ,CANCER diagnosis ,TABOO ,EPIDEMIOLOGY of cancer ,YOUNG women ,CANCER treatment ,ADVICE - Abstract
The incidence of breast cancer is increasing rapidly in urban India due to the changing lifestyle and exposure to risk factors. Diagnosis at an advanced stage and in younger women are the most concerning issues of breast cancer in India. Lack of awareness and social taboos related to cancer diagnosis make women feel hesitant to seek timely medical advice. As almost half of women develop breast cancer at an age younger than 50 years, breast cancer diagnosis poses a huge financial burden on the household and impacts the entire family. Moreover, inaccessibility, unaffordability, and high out-of-pocket expenditure make this situation grimmer. Women find it difficult to get quality cancer care closer to their homes and end up traveling long distances for seeking treatment. Significant differences in the cancer epidemiology compared to the west make the adoption of western breast cancer management guidelines challenging for Indian women. In this article, we intend to provide a comprehensive review of the management of breast cancer from diagnosis to treatment for both early and advanced stages from the perspective of low-middle-income countries. Starting with a brief introduction to epidemiology and guidelines for diagnostic modalities (imaging and pathology), treatment has been discussed for early breast cancer (EBC), locally advanced, and MBC. In-depth information on loco-regional and systemic therapy has been provided focusing on standard treatment protocols as well as scenarios where treatment can be de-escalated or escalated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. 2. Pathologische Anatomie des Mammacarcinoms.
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Schauer, A., Droese, M., and Rahlf, G.
- Abstract
Copyright of Langenbecks Archiv fuer Chirurgie is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 1978
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28. Extensive clinical testing of Deep Learning Segmentation models for thorax and breast cancer radiotherapy planning.
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Mikalsen, Stine Gyland, Skjøtskift, Torleiv, Flote, Vidar Gordon, Hämäläinen, Niklas Petteri, Heydari, Mojgan, and Rydén-Eilertsen, Karsten
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MAMMOGRAMS ,CHEST tumors ,DEEP learning ,CANCER patient psychology ,CHEST X rays ,TIME ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUANTITATIVE research ,MEDICAL protocols ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DOSE-response relationship (Radiation) ,QUALITATIVE research ,AUTOMATION ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COMPUTED tomography ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,BREAST tumors ,RADIATION dosimetry ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: The performance of deep learning segmentation (DLS) models for automatic organ extraction from CT images in the thorax and breast regions was investigated. Furthermore, the readiness and feasibility of integrating DLS into clinical practice were addressed by measuring the potential time savings and dosimetric impact. Material and Methods: Thirty patients referred to radiotherapy for breast cancer were prospectively included. A total of 23 clinically relevant left- and right-sided organs were contoured manually on CT images according to ESTRO guidelines. Next, auto-segmentation was executed, and the geometric agreement between the auto-segmented and manually contoured organs was qualitatively assessed applying a scale in the range [0-not acceptable, 3-no corrections]. A quantitative validation was carried out by calculating Dice coefficients (DSC) and the 95% percentile of Hausdorff distances (HD95). The dosimetric impact of optimizing the treatment plans on the uncorrected DLS contours, was investigated from a dose coverage analysis using DVH values of the manually delineated contours as references. Results: The qualitative analysis showed that 93% of the DLS generated OAR contours did not need corrections, except for the heart where 67% of the contours needed corrections. The majority of DLS generated CTVs needed corrections, whereas a minority were deemed not acceptable. Still, using the DLS-model for CTV and heart delineation is on average 14 minutes faster. An average DSC=0.91 and H95=9.8 mm were found for the left and right breasts, respectively. Likewise, and average DSC in the range [0.66, 0.76]mm and HD95 in the range [7.04, 12.05]mm were found for the lymph nodes. Conclusion: The validation showed that the DLS generated OAR contours can be used clinically. Corrections were required to most of the DLS generated CTVs, and therefore warrants more attention before possibly implementing the DLS models clinically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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29. Review of the Sonographic Features of Interpectoral (Rotter) Lymph Nodes in Breast Cancer Staging.
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Engel, Adam J., Shin, Kyungmin, Adrada, Beatriz E., Moseley, Tanya W., Krishnamurthy, Savitri, and Whitman, Gary J.
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- 2023
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30. Who Needs Level III Lymph Node Dissection in Carcinoma Breast—Study from a Tertiary Care Center.
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Suresh, Girish Mysore, Yeshwanth, R., Arjunan, Ravi, Ramachandra, C., and Altaf, Syed
- Abstract
In Indian females, breast cancer is the most common cancer with a late stage of presentation leading to one-third of patients undergoing modified radical mastectomy (MRM). Our study is undertaken to find out predictors of level III axillary lymph node metastasis in breast cancer and who needs complete axillary lymph node dissection (ALND). Retrospective study of 146 patients who undergone MRM or breast-conserving surgery (BCS) with complete ALND at Kidwai Memorial Institute of Oncology was done, and data was analyzed to find out the frequency of level III lymph nodes and the demographic relation and its relation to positive lymph nodes in level I + II. Positive metastatic level III lymph node was found in 6% of patients, with the median age of the patient in our study with level III positivity was 48.5 years with 63% pathological stage II with 88% perinodal spread (PNS)– and lymphovascular invasion (LVI)–positive. Involvement of level III lymph node was associated with gross disease in level I + II lymph node having more than four lymph node-positive and with pT3 stage or more which has higher chances of level III lymph node involvement. Level III lymph node involvement, though rare in early-stage breast cancer, is associated with larger clinical and pathological sizes (T3 or more), more than 4 lymph node-positive in level I + II and with PNS and LVI. Hence, based on these results, we recommend that for inpatient with more than 5-cm tumor size and those with the gross disease in axilla, complete ALND is recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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31. Extent of Axillary Dissection Preceding Irradiation for Carcinoma of the Breast
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Schwartz, Gordon F., D'Ugo, Domenico M., and Rosenberg, Anne L.
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• "Limited" surgery and irradiation have become more popular therapeutic options for women with stage I and stage II breast cancer, and surgical attention to the axilla is part of this approach. To understand the limitations of whatever axillary procedure is recommended, we undertook a retrospective analysis of the records of 277 women who had undergone radical or modified radical mastectomy. Of this group, 127 had metastases to at least one axillary or interpectoral lymph node. Skip metastases occurred in 13% of women with positive nodes; two women (1.6%) had metastases only to level III nodes, and two women had metastases only to interpectoral nodes. The extremely uncommon occurrence of metastases to level III alone or to interpectoral nodes alone, but the greater likelihood of skip metastases to level II, argues for both level I and level II axillary dissection preceding irradiation for patients with invasive carcinomas of the breast.(Arch Surg 1986;121:1395-1398)
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- 1986
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32. Target Delineation and Contouring.
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Corbin, Kimberly S. and Mutter, Robert W.
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- 2016
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33. Risk factors for the development of severe breast cancer-related lymphedema: a retrospective cohort study.
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Liu, Xiaozhen, Sun, Kewang, Yang, Hongjian, Xia, Lingli, Lu, Kefeng, Meng, Xuli, and Li, Yongfeng
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LYMPHEDEMA ,PREOPERATIVE risk factors ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,COHORT analysis ,SCARS - Abstract
Background: Severe lymphedema presents a challenge in terms of treatment due to the significant formation of scar tissue that accompanies it. The aim of this study was to identify intraoperative and preoperative risk factors of severe lymphedema and to develop a nomogram for estimating the risk of severe lymphedema within 3 years of surgery. Method: Data was collected from a retrospective cohort of 326 patients with BCRL at the Zhejiang Cancer Hospital from November 2015 to November 2018. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis was conducted to identify predictive indicators of severe lymphedema. A nomogram was developed to further improve the clinical applicability. Results: In the retrospective cohort, the ratio of severe/non-severe lymphedema within 3 years of surgery was 1:3. Independent risk factors for severe lymphedema were determined to be age, positive lymph nodes, interpectoral (Rotter's) lymph nodes (IPNs) dissection, and educational level. IPNs dissection was found to contribute greatly to the development of severe lymphedema with a higher odds ratio (7.76; 95% CI: 3.87–15.54) than other risk factors. A nomogram was developed by integrating age, positive lymph nodes, IPNs dissection, and educational level, which yielded a C-index of 0.810 and 0.681 in the training and validation cohort, respectively. This suggested a moderate performance of the nomogram in predicting the risk of severe lymphedema within 3 years of surgery. The cut-off values of the low-, medium- and high-risk probabilities were 0.0876 and 0.3498, and the severe lymphedema exhibited a significantly higher risk probability as compared with the non-severe lymphedema. Conclusion: This study identified the risk factors of severe lymphedema and highlighted the substantial contribution of IPNs dissection to the severity of lymphedema. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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34. Modern Management of Chest Wall Recurrences after Mastectomy.
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Barmettler, Gabi, Williams, Michael D., and Cortina, Chandler S.
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Purpose of Review: A chest wall recurrence after mastectomy for breast cancer requires multimodality treatment. In this article, we review local and systemic therapy treatments for recurrent chest wall disease. Recent Findings: There appears to be a survival benefit for patients who can undergo local resection in combination with radiation therapy. Retrospective series have shown an overall benefit with minimal risk of re-irradiation. The success of performing a sentinel lymph node biopsy after a mastectomy and after a previous sentinel node biopsy has been reported. Overall, there is limited data on systemic therapy options; however, there is no benefit to adjuvant chemotherapy compared to endocrine therapy alone with the non-metastatic hormone-receptor-positive disease. Summary: Local resection may require a comprehensive surgical team to achieve negative margins and reconstruct defects. Radiation therapy should be considered, even if the setting of previous radiation and systemic therapy is based on receptor status and previous systemic treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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35. Beyond N Staging in Breast Cancer: Importance of MRI and Ultrasound-based Imaging.
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Di Paola, Valerio, Mazzotta, Giorgio, Pignatelli, Vincenza, Bufi, Enida, D'Angelo, Anna, Conti, Marco, Panico, Camilla, Fiorentino, Vincenzo, Pierconti, Francesco, Kilburn-Toppin, Fleur, Belli, Paolo, and Manfredi, Riccardo
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BREAST cancer prognosis ,BREAST tumor diagnosis ,BIOPSY ,AXILLA ,CANCER chemotherapy ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,LYMPH nodes ,INDIVIDUALIZED medicine ,TUMOR classification ,BREAST tumors ,WOMEN'S health - Abstract
Simple Summary: Breast cancer is the most frequent cancer affecting women and metastatic breast cancer is still the leading cause of death from all cancers in women, accounting for about 3.6% of all deaths in women. The N-stage represents the main prognostic factor affecting the rate of recurrence and the therapeutic management so that a correct staging of the axillary lymph node status is fundamental. Since clinical examination of the axillary cavity is associated with a high false negative rate, reaching values of 45%, the role of imaging becomes crucial to obtain an accurate assessment of loco-regional lymph nodes at the time of diagnosis. In this setting, Ultrasound and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) represent two important diagnostic tools. In particular, MRI represents an accurate and reproducible technique, which allows an accurate staging of the "N-stage". The correct N-staging in breast cancer is crucial to tailor treatment and stratify the prognosis. N-staging is based on the number and the localization of suspicious regional nodes on physical examination and/or imaging. Since clinical examination of the axillary cavity is associated with a high false negative rate, imaging modalities play a central role. In the presence of a T1 or T2 tumor and 0–2 suspicious nodes, on imaging at the axillary level I or II, a patient should undergo sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB), whereas in the presence of three or more suspicious nodes at the axillary level I or II confirmed by biopsy, they should undergo axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) or neoadjuvant chemotherapy according to a multidisciplinary approach, as well as in the case of internal mammary, supraclavicular, or level III axillary involved lymph nodes. In this scenario, radiological assessment of lymph nodes at the time of diagnosis must be accurate. False positives may preclude a sentinel lymph node in an otherwise eligible woman; in contrast, false negatives may lead to an unnecessary SLNB and the need for a second surgical procedure. In this review, we aim to describe the anatomy of the axilla and breast regional lymph node, and their diagnostic features to discriminate between normal and pathological nodes at Ultrasound (US) and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). Moreover, the technical aspects, the advantage and limitations of MRI versus US, and the possible future perspectives are also analyzed, through the analysis of the recent literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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36. Radiotherapy of Breast Cancer in Laterally Tilted Prone vs. Supine Position: What about the Internal Mammary Chain?
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Temme, Nils, Hermann, Robert Michael, Hinsche, Tanja, Becker, Jan-Niklas, Sonnhoff, Mathias, Kaltenborn, Alexander, Carl, Ulrich Martin, Christiansen, Hans, Geworski, Lilli, and Nitsche, Mirko
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SUPINE position ,BREAST ,LUNGS ,PATIENT positioning ,EXTERNAL beam radiotherapy ,BREAST cancer ,CANCER radiotherapy - Abstract
Background: In the multimodal breast-conserving curative therapy of some high-risk breast cancer patients, extended external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) not only to the breast but also to the supraclavicular fossa and the internal mammary chain (parasternal region (PSR)) is indicated. We report a dosimetric study on the EBRT of the breast ("B") and the breast including PSR ("B + PSR"), comparing the supine and the laterally tilted prone patient positions in free breathing. Methods: The planning CT scans of 20 left- and 20 right-sided patients were analyzed. EBRT plans were calculated with 3D conformal EBRT (3D) and with intensity-modulated EBRT (IMRT) for "B" and "B + PSR" in the prone and supine positions. The mean and threshold doses were computed. The quality of EBRT plans was compared with an overall plan assessment factor (OPAF), comprising three subfactors, homogeneity, conformity, and radiogenic exposure of OAR. Results: In the EBRT of "B", prone positioning significantly reduced the exposure of the OARs "heart" and "ipsilateral lung" and "lymphatic regions". The OPAF was significantly better in the prone position, regardless of the planning technique or the treated breast side. In the EBRT of "B + PSR", supine positioning significantly reduced the OAR "heart" exposure but increased the dose to the OARs "ipsilateral lung" and "lymphatic regions". There were no significant differences for the OPAF, independent of the irradiated breast side. Only the IMRT planning technique increased the chance of a comparatively good EBRT plan. Conclusion: Free breathing prone positioning significantly improves plan quality in the EBRT of the breast but not in the EBRT of the breast + PSR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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37. Proton therapy for early breast cancer patients in the DBCG proton trial: planning, adaptation, and clinical experience from the first 43 patients.
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Fuglsang Jensen, Maria, Stick, Line Bjerregaard, Høyer, Morten, Kronborg, Camilla Jensenius Skovhus, Lorenzen, Ebbe Laugaard, Mortensen, Hanna Rahbek, Nyström, Petra Witt, Petersen, Stine Elleberg, Randers, Pia, Thai, Linh My Hoang, Yates, Esben Svitzer, and Offersen, Birgitte Vrou
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WORK ,PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation ,CANCER patients ,PROTON therapy ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MASTECTOMY ,LUMPECTOMY ,EARLY diagnosis ,BREAST tumors ,HEALTH planning - Abstract
The Danish Breast Cancer Group (DBCG) Proton Trial randomizes breast cancer patients selected on high mean heart dose (MHD) or high lung dose (V20Gy/V17Gy) in the photon plan between photon and proton therapy. This study presents the proton plans and adaptation strategy for the first 43 breast cancer patients treated with protons in Denmark. Forty-four proton plans (one patient with bilateral cancer) were included; 2 local and 42 loco-regional including internal mammary nodes (IMN). Nineteen patients had a mastectomy and 25 a lumpectomy. The prescribed dose was either 50 Gy in 25 fractions (n = 30) or 40 Gy in 15 fractions (n = 14) wherefrom five received simultaneous integrated boost to the tumor bed. Using 2-3 en face proton fields, single-field optimization, robust optimization and a 5 cm range shifter ensured robustness towards breathing motion, setup- and range uncertainties. An anatomical evaluation was performed by evaluating the dose after adding/removing 3 mm and 5 mm tissue to/from the body-outline and used to define treatment tolerances for anatomical changes. The nominal and robust criteria were met for all patients except two. The median MHD was 1.5 Gy (0.5–3.4 Gy, 50 Gy) and 1.1 Gy (0.0–1.5 Gy, 40 Gy). The anatomical evaluations showed how 5 mm shrinkage approximately doubled the MHD while 5 mm swelling reduced target coverage of the IMN below constraints. Ensuring 3–5 mm robustness toward swelling was prioritized but not always achieved by robust optimization alone emphasizing the need for a distal margin. Twenty-eight patients received plan adaptation, eight patients received two, and one received five. This proton planning strategy ensured robust treatment plans within a pre-defined level of acceptable anatomical changes that fulfilled the planning criteria for most of the patients and ensured low MHD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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38. Imaging features of sentinel lymph node mapped by multidetector-row computed tomography lymphography in predicting axillary lymph node metastasis.
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Ou, Xiaochan, Zhu, Jianbin, Qu, Yaoming, Wang, Chengmei, Wang, Baiye, Xu, Xirui, Wang, Yanyu, Wen, Haitao, Ma, Andong, Liu, Xinzi, Zou, Xia, and Wen, Zhibo
- Subjects
SENTINEL lymph nodes ,COMPUTED tomography ,LYMPHATIC metastasis ,METASTATIC breast cancer ,BREAST cancer prognosis ,LYMPHANGIOGRAPHY - Abstract
Introduction: Accurately assessing axillary lymph node (ALN) status in breast cancer is vital for clinical decision making and prognosis. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the predictive value of sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapped by multidetector-row computed tomography lymphography (MDCT-LG) for ALN metastasis in breast cancer patients. Methods: 112 patients with breast cancer who underwent preoperative MDCT-LG examination were included in the study. Long-axis diameter, short-axis diameter, ratio of long-/short-axis and cortical thickness were measured. Logistic regression analysis was performed to evaluate independent predictors associated with ALN metastasis. The prediction of ALN metastasis was determined with related variables of SLN using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. Results: Among the 112 cases, 35 (30.8%) cases had ALN metastasis. The cortical thickness in metastatic ALN group was significantly thicker than that in non-metastatic ALN group (4.0 ± 1.2 mm vs. 2.4 ± 0.7 mm, P < 0.001). Multi-logistic regression analysis indicated that cortical thickness of > 3.3 mm (OR 24.53, 95% CI 6.58–91.48, P < 0.001) had higher risk for ALN metastasis. The best sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value(NPV) and AUC of MDCT-LG for ALN metastasis prediction based on the single variable of cortical thickness were 76.2%, 88.5%, 90.2% and 0.872 (95% CI 0.773–0.939, P < 0.001), respectively. Conclusion: ALN status can be predicted using the imaging features of SLN which was mapped on MDCT-LG in breast cancer patients. Besides, it may be helpful to select true negative lymph nodes in patients with early breast cancer, and SLN biopsy can be avoided in clinically and radiographically negative axilla. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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39. Commentary.
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Gardner, Bernard
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- 1996
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40. Eribulin combined with radiation therapy in a young patient re‐irradiated for a new lesion of breast cancer.
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Dieng, Oulimata, Laurence, Valerie, Logerot, Christelle, and Kirova, Youlia M.
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AXILLA ,CANCER relapse ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,ERIBULIN ,COMBINED modality therapy ,BREAST tumors ,ADULTS - Abstract
Eribulin is widely used in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer, with a manageable toxicity profile. This aggressive disease often requires systemic and local treatments, comprising surgery or radiotherapy. However, eribulin is usually discontinued during radiation therapy due to the lack of data concerning the safety of this combination, especially in the setting of repeat locoregional radiation therapy. Our patient was diagnosed with ER positive invasive ductal carcinoma of the left breast initially treated by surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, and hormone therapy. She then received various lines of chemotherapy for multiple triple‐negative relapses in the left axillary region. Since October 2020, she has been treated by eribulin. In order to improve local control, it was decided to add local radiation therapy to the region of recurrence in addition to systemic therapy. She underwent radiation therapy concomitantly with eribulin from February to March 2021. Treatment was very well tolerated, and no acute toxicity was reported. This is the first published case of repeat locoregional radiation therapy in combination with eribulin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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41. Ultrasonographic detection of interpectoral (Rotter's) node involvement in breast cancer.
- Author
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Oran, İsmail, Memiş, Ayşenur, and Üstün, Esin Emin
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- 1996
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42. Merits of Level III Axillary Dissection in Node-Positive Breast Cancer: A Prospective, Single-Institution Study From India
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Shalaka Joshi, Jarin Noronha, Rohini Hawaldar, Girish Kundgulwar, Vaibhav Vanmali, Vani Parmar, Nita Nair, Tanuja Shet, and Rajendra Badwe
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
PURPOSE: A complete axillary lymph node (ALN) dissection is therapeutic in node-positive breast cancer. Presently, there is no international consensus regarding anatomic levels to be addressed in complete axillary dissection. We assessed the burden of disease in level III axilla. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A prospectively maintained database was assessed for 1,591 consecutive patients with nonmetastatic breast cancer registered at Tata Memorial Center, Mumbai, between January 2009 and December 2014. RESULTS: A median of four (zero to 20) level III ALNs were dissected and a median of two (one to 17) nodes were positive. A total of 27.3% (434 of 1,591) patients had level III ALN metastasis, and 4.7% of patients had positive interpectoral nodes. Some 53.2% of patients had level III metastases in the presence of four or more positive level I and II ALNs. A total of 9.4% of patients had level III involvement when one to three ALNs were positive in level I and II (P < .001). Some 53.2% of patients had level III metastases in the presence of four or more positive level I and II ALNs. On logistic regression analysis, four or more positive ALNs in level I or II (P < .001), inner/central quadrant tumor location (P = .013), and perinodal extension (P < .001) were associated with level III ALN involvement. At a median follow-up of 36 months, the disease-free survival was significantly worse for level III ALN metastases on univariate analysis (P < .001). On multivariate Cox regression analysis, histologic grade (P = .006), four or more positive ALNs (P < .001), hormone receptor status (P < .001), and tumor size (P = .037) were independent prognostic factors for disease-free survival. CONCLUSION: The axillary nodal burden is high in patients with breast cancer in developing countries like India. One of two women with four or more positive level I and II ALNs may have residual disease in level III if it is not cleared during surgery. Intraoperative interpectoral space clearance should be considered in the presence of either palpable interpectoral lymph nodes or multiple positive ALNs.
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- 2019
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43. Interpectoral Lymph Node Dissection Can Be Spared in pN0/N1 Invasive Breast Cancer Undergoing Modified Radical Mastectomy: Single-Institution Experience from Mainland China.
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Yan, Yun, Jiang, Li, Fang, Jianjiang, Dai, Yi, Chenyu, Xingzi, and Ding, Jinhua
- Subjects
AXILLARY lymph node dissection ,CANCER invasiveness ,LYMPHADENECTOMY ,METASTATIC breast cancer ,BREAST cancer ,LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Purpose: Interpectoral lymph nodes (IPNs) are one of the lymphatic drainage pathways in breast cancer. However, the clinical significance of IPN dissection is controversial, and there is no international consensus regarding the management of IPN for resectable breast cancer. Our study aims to identify the independent predictors of IPN metastasis in invasive breast cancer (IBC) and provide some evidence for rational decision-making. Methods: Data from 214 IBC patients who were treated with modified radical mastectomy (MRM) plus IPN dissection or biopsy in Ningbo Medical Center Lihuili Hospital were retrospectively reviewed. Univariate analysis and multivariate logistic regression analysis were used to analyse the correlations between IPN occurrence or metastasis and clinicopathological characteristics. Results: The occurrence rate of IPN in overall population was 75.2%. Univariate analysis showed that tumour size, involvement of axillary lymph nodes (ALNs), histological grading, Ki67 index and molecular subtype were associated with the occurrence of IPN. However, involvement of ALN was the only independent predictor by multivariate logistic regression analysis. In 161 patients whose IPNs were detected, 46 (28.6%) patients had one or more metastatic IPNs. Univariate analysis showed that tumour size, involvement of ALN, oestrogen receptor status and molecular subtype were associated with IPN metastasis. However, involvement of ALN was the only predictor by multivariate logistic regression analysis. In total, 0%, 5.0%, 26.1% and 84.2% of pN0, pN1, pN2, and pN3 patients had metastatic IPNs, respectively. Conclusion: The relatively low rate of IPN metastasis in patients with pN0/N1 breast cancer suggests that IPN dissection can be safely spared in patients with low tumour burden in axillary lymph nodes (pN0/N1), when MRM even breast conservation surgery is performed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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44. Poster Presentation.
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Bhadani, Umesh
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SPIRITUALITY ,PALLIATIVE medicine ,RADIOTHERAPY ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Published
- 2021
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45. Hypermetabolic lymphadenopathy following administration of BNT162b2 mRNA Covid-19 vaccine: incidence assessed by [18F]FDG PET-CT and relevance to study interpretation.
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Cohen, Dan, Krauthammer, Shir Hazut, Wolf, Ido, and Even-Sapir, Einat
- Subjects
COVID-19 vaccines ,LYMPHADENITIS ,MESSENGER RNA ,LYMPH nodes ,BREAST cancer ,COMPUTED tomography - Abstract
Purpose: Nationwide mass vaccination against Covid-19 started in Israel in late 2020. Soon we identified on [
18 F]FDG PET-CT studies vaccine-associated hypermetabolic lymphadenopathy (VAHL) in axillary or supraclavicular lymph nodes (ASLN) ipsilateral to the vaccination site. Sometimes, differentiation between the malignant and benign nature of the hypermetabolic lymphadenopathy (HLN) could not be made, and equivocal HLN (EqHL) was reported. The purpose of the study was to determine the overall incidence of VAHL after BNT162b2 vaccination and also its relevance to PET-CT interpretation in oncologic patients. Methods: A total of 951 consecutive patients that underwent [18 F]FDG PET-CT studies in our department were interviewed regarding the sites and dates of the vaccine doses. A total of 728 vaccinated patients (All-Vac group) were included: 346 received the first dose only (Vac-1 group) and 382 received the booster dose as well (Vac-2 group). Studies were categorized as no HLN, malignant-HLN (MHL), VAHL, or EqHL. In studies with VAHL, location, [18 F]FDG-intensity uptake and nodes size were recorded. Results: The incidences of HLN were 45.6%, 36.4%, and 53.9% in All-Vac, Vac-1, and Vac-2 groups, respectively. VAHL was reported in 80.1% of vaccinated patients with HLN. Lower incidences of VAHL were found during the first 5 days or in the third week after the first vaccine and beyond 20 days after the booster dose. In 49 of 332 (14.8%) vaccinated patients, we could not determine whether HLN was MHL or VAHL. Breast cancer and lymphoma were the leading diseases with EqHL. Conclusion: VAHL is frequently observed after BNT162b2 administration, more commonly and with higher intensity following the booster dose. To minimize false and equivocal reports in oncological patients, timing of [18 F]FDG PET-CT should be based on the time intervals found to have a lower incidence of VAHL, and choice of vaccine injection site should be advised, mainly in patients where ASLN are a relevant site of tumor involvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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46. Clinical feasibility of deep learning-based auto-segmentation of target volumes and organs-at-risk in breast cancer patients after breast-conserving surgery.
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Chung, Seung Yeun, Chang, Jee Suk, Choi, Min Seo, Chang, Yongjin, Choi, Byong Su, Chun, Jaehee, Keum, Ki Chang, Kim, Jin Sung, and Kim, Yong Bae
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LUMPECTOMY ,AXILLARY lymph node dissection ,BREAST cancer ,CANCER patients ,COMPUTED tomography ,CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks - Abstract
Background: In breast cancer patients receiving radiotherapy (RT), accurate target delineation and reduction of radiation doses to the nearby normal organs is important. However, manual clinical target volume (CTV) and organs-at-risk (OARs) segmentation for treatment planning increases physicians' workload and inter-physician variability considerably. In this study, we evaluated the potential benefits of deep learning-based auto-segmented contours by comparing them to manually delineated contours for breast cancer patients.Methods: CTVs for bilateral breasts, regional lymph nodes, and OARs (including the heart, lungs, esophagus, spinal cord, and thyroid) were manually delineated on planning computed tomography scans of 111 breast cancer patients who received breast-conserving surgery. Subsequently, a two-stage convolutional neural network algorithm was used. Quantitative metrics, including the Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) and 95% Hausdorff distance, and qualitative scoring by two panels from 10 institutions were used for analysis. Inter-observer variability and delineation time were assessed; furthermore, dose-volume histograms and dosimetric parameters were also analyzed using another set of patient data.Results: The correlation between the auto-segmented and manual contours was acceptable for OARs, with a mean DSC higher than 0.80 for all OARs. In addition, the CTVs showed favorable results, with mean DSCs higher than 0.70 for all breast and regional lymph node CTVs. Furthermore, qualitative subjective scoring showed that the results were acceptable for all CTVs and OARs, with a median score of at least 8 (possible range: 0-10) for (1) the differences between manual and auto-segmented contours and (2) the extent to which auto-segmentation would assist physicians in clinical practice. The differences in dosimetric parameters between the auto-segmented and manual contours were minimal.Conclusions: The feasibility of deep learning-based auto-segmentation in breast RT planning was demonstrated. Although deep learning-based auto-segmentation cannot be a substitute for radiation oncologists, it is a useful tool with excellent potential in assisting radiation oncologists in the future. Trial registration Retrospectively registered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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47. Adjuvant Trastuzumab Emtansine (T-DM1) and Concurrent Radiotherapy for Residual Invasive HER2-positive Breast Cancer: Single-center Preliminary Results.
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Zolcsák, Zita, Loirat, Delphine, Fourquet, Alain, and Kirova, Youlia M.
- Published
- 2020
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48. Spatial location of local recurrences after mastectomy: a systematic review.
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Kaidar-Person, Orit, Poortmans, Philip, Offersen, Birgitte Vrou, Siesling, Sabine, Sklair-Levy, Miri, Meattini, Icro, de Ruysscher, Dirk, Kühn, Thorsten, and Boersma, Liesbeth J.
- Abstract
Purpose: We performed a systematic review to document the spatial location of local recurrences (LR) after mastectomy. Methods: A PubMed search was conducted in August 2019 for the following terms: breast [Title/Abstract] AND cancer [Title/Abstract] AND recurrence [Title/Abstract] AND mastectomy [Title/Abstract]. The search was filtered for English language. Exclusion criteria included studies that did not specify the LR location or studies reporting LR associated with inflammatory breast cancer, or other breast cancers such as phyllodes tumours, lymphoma or associated with sarcoma/angiosarcoma. Results: A total of 3922 titles were identified, of which 21 publications were eligible for inclusion in the final analysis. A total of 6901 mastectomy patients were included (range 25–1694). The mean LR proportion was 3.5%. Among the total of 351 LR lesions, 81.8% were in the subcutaneous tissue and the skin, while 16% were pectoral muscle recurrences. Conclusion: Local recurrences are mostly located within the subcutaneous tissue and the skin, assumed to result from unrecognized/subclinical tumour foci left behind after mastectomy, surgical implantation of tumour cells in the wound/scar and/or tumour emboli within the subcutaneous lymphatics. Pectoral muscle recurrences are less frequent and may be attributed to residual disease along the posterior surgical margin and/or lymphatic involvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. PET/CT of breast cancer regional nodal recurrences: an evaluation of contouring atlases.
- Author
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Beaton, Laura, Nica, Luminita, Tyldesley, Scott, Sek, Kenny, Ayre, Gareth, Aparicio, Maria, Gondara, Lovedeep, Speers, Caroline, and Nichol, Alan
- Subjects
BREAST cancer ,BACKGROUND radiation ,ATLASES ,POSITRON emission tomography computed tomography ,GROUP psychotherapy - Abstract
Background: To validate the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) and European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology (ESTRO) breast cancer nodal clinical target volumes (CTVs) and to investigate the Radiotherapy Comparative Effectiveness Consortium (RADCOMP) Posterior Neck volume in relation to regional nodal recurrences (RNR).Methods: From a population-based database, 69 patients were identified who developed RNR after curative treatment for breast cancer. RNRs were detected with 18-fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET/CT). All patients were treatment-naïve for RNR when imaged. The RTOG and ESTRO nodal CTVs and RADCOMP Posterior Neck volumes were contoured onto a template patient's CT. RNRs were contoured on each PET/CT and deformed onto the template patient's CT. Each RNR was represented by a 5 mm diameter epicentre, and categorized as 'inside', 'marginal' or 'outside' the CTV boundaries.Results: Sixty-nine patients with 226 nodes (median 2, range 1-11) were eligible for inclusion. Thirty patients had received adjuvant tangent and regional nodal radiotherapy, 16 tangent-only radiotherapy and 23 no adjuvant radiotherapy. For the RTOG CTVs, the RNR epicentres were 70% (158/226) inside, 4% (8/226) marginal and 27% (60/226) outside. They included the full extent of the RNR epicentres in 38% (26/69) of patients. Addition of the RADCOMP Posterior Neck volume increased complete RNR coverage to 48% (33/69) of patients. For the ESTRO CTVs, the RNR epicentres were 73% (165/226) inside, 2% (4/226) marginal and 25% (57/226) outside. They included the full extent of the RNR epicentres in 57% (39/69) of patients. Addition of the RADCOMP Posterior Neck volume increased complete RNR coverage to 70% (48/69) of patients.Conclusions: The RTOG and ESTRO breast cancer nodal CTVs do not fully cover all potential areas of RNR, but the ESTRO nodal CTVs provided full coverage of all RNR epicentres in 19% more patients than the RTOG nodal CTVs. With addition of the RADCOMP Posterior Neck volume to the ESTRO CTVs, 70% of patients had full coverage of all RNR epicentres. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Grossing and reporting of breast cancer specimens: An evidence-based approach.
- Author
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Shet, Tanuja, Pai, Trupti, Wadasadawala, Tabassum, Nair, Nita, and Gulia, Seema
- Subjects
BREAST cancer ,EPIDERMAL growth factor ,SENTINEL lymph nodes ,PROGESTERONE receptors ,ESTROGEN receptors ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,BREAST tumors - Abstract
A histopathology report offers important prognostic and predictive information that helps plan systemic therapy in breast cancer. However, in many cases a pathologist fails to provide relevant information chiefly due to the lack of awareness of the impact of these parameters in clinical decision-making. This review seeks to put forth common practice points in grossing and reporting of specimens harboring breast cancer with focus on latest revisions in the same. Just as it is important to document tumor size, tumor type, margins, estrogen receptor/progesterone receptor, and human epidermal growth factor (ER/PR/HER2) in breast cancer, we need to also focus on sentinel node grossing, nodal burden, size of nodal metastasis, and extranodal extension. In parallel, increasing number of patients are getting neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer and points in grossing and reporting of such specimens are also alluded to. This article will serve as reference guide to pathologists on what we do and why we do the same. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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