scholarly journals False-negative frozen section of sentinel nodes in early breast cancer (cT1-2N0) patients

2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhu-Jun Loh ◽  
Kuo-Ting Lee ◽  
Ya-Ping Chen ◽  
Yao-Lung Kuo ◽  
Wei-Pang Chung ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is the standard approach for the axillary region in early breast cancer patients with clinically negative nodes. The present study investigated patients with false-negative sentinel nodes in intraoperative frozen sections (FNSN) using real-world data. Methods A case–control study with a 1:3 ratio was conducted. FNSN was determined when sentinel nodes (SNs) were negative in frozen sections but positive for metastasis in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) sections. The control was defined as having no metastasis of SNs in both frozen and FFPE sections. Results A total of 20 FNSN cases and 60 matched controls from 333 SLNB patients were enrolled between April 1, 2005, and November 31, 2009. The demographics and intrinsic subtypes of breast cancer were similar between the FNSN and control groups. The FNSN patients had larger tumor sizes on preoperative mammography (P = 0.033) and more lymphatic tumor emboli on core biopsy (P < 0.001). Four FNSN patients had metastasis in nonrelevant SNs. Another 16 FNSN patients had benign lymphoid hyperplasia of SNs in frozen sections and metastasis in the same SNs from FFPE sections. Micrometastasis was detected in seven of 16 patients, and metastases in nonrelevant SNs were recognized in two patients. All FNSN patients underwent a second operation with axillary lymph node dissection (ALND). After a median follow-up of 143 months, no FNSN patients developed breast cancer recurrence. The disease-free survival, breast cancer-specific survival, and overall survival in FNSN were not inferior to those in controls. Conclusions Patients with a larger tumor size and more lymphatic tumor emboli have a higher incidence of FNSN. However, the outcomes of FNSN patients after completing ALND were noninferior to those without SN metastasis. ALND provides a correct staging for patients with metastasis in nonsentinel axillary lymph nodes.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhu-Jun Loh ◽  
Kuo-Ting Lee ◽  
Ya-Ping Chen ◽  
Yao-Lung Kuo ◽  
Wei-Pang Chung ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is the standard approach of the axillary region for early breast cancer patients with clinically negative nodes. The present study investigated patients with false-negative sentinel nodes of intraoperative frozen section (FNSNs) in real-world data.Methods: A case–control study with a 1:3 ratio was conducted. FNSN was diagnosed when sentinel nodes (SNs) are negative in frozen sections but positive for metastasis in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) sections. The control was defined as having no metastasis of SNs in both frozen and FFPE sections.Results: A total of 20 FNSN cases and 60 matched controls were enrolled from 333 SLNB patients between April 1, 2005, and November 31, 2009. The demographics and intrinsic subtypes of breast cancer were similar between FNSN and controls. The FNSN patients had larger tumor sizes in preoperative mammography (P = 0.033) and more lymphatic tumor emboli in core biopsy (P < 0.001). Four FNSN patients had metastasis in the non-relevant SNs. Another 16 FNSN patients had benign lymphoid hyperplasia of SNs in frozen sections and metastasis in the same SNs from the FFPE sections. Micrometastasis was detected in seven of 16 patients, and metastases in non-relevant SNs were recognized in two patients. All FNSN patients received a second operation with axillary lymph node dissection (ALND). After a median follow-up of 143 months, no FNSN patients developed recurrence of breast cancer. The disease-free survival, disease-specific survival, and overall survival in FNSN were not inferior to the controls.Conclusions: The patients with a larger tumor size and more lymphatic tumor emboli have a higher incidence of FNSN. However, outcomes of FNSN patients after completing ALND were noninferior to those without metastasis in SNs. ALND provides a correct diagnosis of patients with metastasis in non-sentinel axillary lymph nodes.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhu-Jun Loh ◽  
Kuo-Ting Lee ◽  
Ya-Ping Chen ◽  
Yao-Lung Kuo ◽  
Wei-Pang Chung ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is standard approach of axillary region for early breast cancer patients with clinically negative node. The present study investigated patients with false-negative sentinel nodes (FNSN) of intraoperative frozen section.Methods A case-control study with 1:3 ratio was conducted. FNSN was diagnosed as negative sentinel nodes (SNs) in frozen sections, but positive for metastasis in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) blocks. Control was defined no metastasis of SNs in both frozen and FFPE sections.Results Total 20 FNSN cases and 60 matched-controls were enrolled from 333 SLNB patients between April 1, 2005 and November 31, 2009. The demographics and intrinsic subtypes of breast cancer were similar between FNSN and controls. The FNSN patients had a larger tumor size in preoperative mammography and more lymphatic tumor emboli in core biopsy (P-value 0.033 and < 0.001, respectively). Four FNSN patients had metastasis in the non-relevant SNs. Other 16 FNSN patients had results of benign lymphoid hyperplasia of SNs in frozen sections and metastasis in FFPE blocks. Micrometastasis (less than 2 mm) was detected in seven of 16 patients and metastases in non-sentinel nodes was recognized in two of 16 patients. All FNSN patients received second operation with axillary lymph node dissection (ALND). After a median follow-up of 143 months, no FNSN patients developed recurrence of breast cancer. The disease-free survival, disease-specific survival, and overall survival in FNSN were non-inferior than controls.Conclusion Outcomes of FNSN patients after completing ALND was non-inferior to those without metastasis in SNs. ALND improved survival of patients with metastasis non-sentinel ALNs. However, omitting ALND had no effect for those have only micrometastasis in SNs.


2018 ◽  
Vol 07 (02) ◽  
pp. 132-136
Author(s):  
Vedant Kabra ◽  
R. Aggarwal ◽  
S. Vardhan ◽  
M. Singh ◽  
R. Khandelwal ◽  
...  

AbstractAxillary lymph node involvement is a very important poor prognostic factor in the clinical staging and management of breast cancer patients. Traditionally, axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) has been used for determining the status of the axillary lymph nodes. More recently the sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) procedure has gained wider acceptance as the standard of care, having the advantage of being less invasivewhile providing good accuracy. This expert group used data from published literature, practical experience and opinion of a large group of academic oncologists to arrive at these practical consensus recommendations in regards with the use of the two different procedures and other issues in patients with early breast cancer for the benefit of community oncologists.


Medicina ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (3) ◽  
pp. 127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dalia Rukanskienė ◽  
Vincentas Veikutis ◽  
Eglė Jonaitienė ◽  
Milda Basevičiūtė ◽  
Domantas Kunigiškis ◽  
...  

Background and objectives: With improved diagnostic means of early breast cancer, the percentage of cases with metastasis in axillary lymph nodes has decreased from 50–75% to 15–30%. Lymphadenectomy and sentinel lymph node biopsy are not treatment procedures, as they aim at axillary nodal staging in breast cancer. Being surgical interventions, they can lead to various complications. Therefore, recently much attention has been paid to the identification of non-invasive methods for axillary nodal staging. In many countries, ultrasound is a first-line method to evaluate axillary lymph node status. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic value of ultrasound in detecting intact axillary lymph nodes and to assess the accuracy of ultrasound in detecting a heavy nodal disease burden. The additional objective was to evaluate patients’ and tumor characteristics leading to false-negative results. Materials and Methods: A total of 227 women with newly diagnosed pT1 breast cancer were included to this prospective study conducted at the Breast Surgery Unit, Clinic of Surgery, Hospital of Lithuanian University of Health Sciences Kauno Klinikos, between May 1, 2016, and May 31, 2018. All patients underwent preoperative axillary ultrasound examination. Ultrasound data were compared with the results of histological examination. The accuracy and true-negative rate of ultrasound were calculated. The reasons of false-negative results were analyzed. Results: Of the 189 patients who had normally appearing axillary lymph nodes on preoperative ultrasound (PAUS-negative), 173 (91.5%) patients were also confirmed to have intact axillary lymph nodes (node-negative) by histological examination after surgery. The accuracy and the negative predictive value of ultrasound examination were 84.1% and 91.5%, respectively. In ≥3 node-positive cases, the accuracy and the negative predictive value increased to 88.7% and 98.3%, respectively. In total, false-negative results were found in 8.5% of the cases (n = 16); in the PAUS-negative group, false-negative results were recorded only in 1.6% of the cases (n = 3). The results of PAUS and pathological examination differed significantly between patients without and with lymphovascular invasion (LV0 vs. LV1, p < 0.001) as well as those showing no human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) expression and patients with weakly or strongly expressed HER2 (HER2(0) vs. HER2(1), p = 0.024). Paired comparisons revealed that the true-negative rate was significantly different between the LV0 and LV1 groups (91% vs. 66.7%, p < 0.05), and the false-negative rate was statistically significant different between the HER2(0) and HER2(1) groups (10.5% vs. 1.2%, p < 0.05). Evaluation of other characteristics showed both the groups to be homogenous. Conclusions: Negative axillary ultrasound excluded axillary metastatic disease in 91.5% of the patients. PAUS had an accuracy of 88.7% in detecting a heavy nodal disease burden. With the absence of lymphovascular invasion (LV0), we can rely on PAUS examination that axillary lymph nodes are intact (PAUS-negative), and this patients’ group could avoid sentinel lymph node biopsy. Patients without HER2 expression are at a greater likelihood of false-negative results; therefore, the findings of ultrasound that axillary lymph nodes are intact (PAUS-negative results) should be interpreted with caution.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-52
Author(s):  
Irina V. Kolyadina ◽  
Tatiana Yu. Danzanova ◽  
Svetlana V. Khokhlova ◽  
Oksana P. Trofimova ◽  
Ekaterina V. Kovaleva ◽  
...  

The involvement of axillary lymph nodes is one of the most important prognostic factors, significantly affecting the treatment strategy for early breast cancer (BC). The risk of axillary lymph node metastases depends directly on a number of factors (age of women, size of tumor, presence of lymphovascular invasion and biological characteristics of cancer). The evaluation of regional lymph node status in patients with early BC includes the clinical examination of regional zones and the ultrasound study (US), using these methods can help to study lymph nodes shape, borders, margins and structure. The sensitivity of ultrasound in the evaluation of regional lymph nodes status directly depends on the biological subtype of the tumor; the minimum level of ultrasound sensitivity in the evaluation of lymph nodes status is detected for luminal HER2-negative cancer (less than 40%), and maximum sensitivity is detected for triple negative and HER2-positive subtypes (6871%). Clinical examination and modern ultrasound are the most accessible methods for the evaluation of regional lymph nodes status, but the possibility to misjudge metastatic process can be detected in 1/4 of patients. Verification of the diagnosis in the preoperative phase (fine-needle aspiration biopsy/core-needle biopsy under ultrasound guidance) allows minimize the number of errors for the regional staging. The sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is the gold standard of regional treatment in patients with early stage BC, nowadays. The randomized trials (NSABP B-32, ACOSOG q0011) show the safety of recession of performing regional lymph node dissection in favor of SLNB not only in case of clinically negative lymph nodes, but also in patients with metastases in 2 sentinel lymph nodes, upon condition that organ-conservative treatment and subsequent radiation therapy will be used. High-quality regional staging, the choice of the therapeutic algorithm in accordance with the biological characteristics of carcinoma, the application of the most effective modern drug regimes, the optimal radiation therapy allow not only minimize the extent of surgery, but also achieve high long-term survival results, provide excellent functional results and high quality of life in patients with the involvement of axillary lymph nodes.


2000 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
pp. 317-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandra Galli ◽  
Lauretta Massaza ◽  
Luca Chiappo ◽  
Adriana Paduos ◽  
Giorgio Rosso

At the Surgery Department of Biella 46 patients were enrolled in a study on the sentinel lymph node (SN) in the period from 1 January 1999 to 30 September 1999. The aim of the study was to determine, on the basis of our own experience, the percentages of accuracy and concordance, and compare them with case series abroad and in Italy; in addition, we sought to establish a possible correlation between certain features of breast cancer and positivity of the axilla. The method utilized was lymphoscintigraphy and gamma probe. Fifteen cases with positive axillary lymph nodes and 12 cases with positive sentinel lymph nodes were found; there were no false positive and three false negative results. No migration of the tracer was observed with lymphoscintigraphy in two cases. The percentage of concordance obtained was 93.2% in the complete series and 96.5% in the subseries that excluded the learning curve. Comparing the percentage of concordance of our case series with those abroad and in Italy, an average overlapping percentage was obtained. The percentage of accuracy obtained in our study was 95.7%, which is slightly higher than the average of percentages of the case series abroad and in Italy.


2000 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
pp. 314-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luciano M. Feggi ◽  
Patrizia Querzoli ◽  
Napoleone Prandini ◽  
Stefano Corcione ◽  
Leonardo Bergossi ◽  
...  

Since October 1997 60 patients with early breast cancer (T <3 cm) were studied. All patients underwent lymphoscintigraphy with two types of colloid: the first (17 pts) with a particle size <1000 nm; the second (43 pts) with a particle size <80 nm. The standard procedure consists of injection, on the day before surgery, of 70 MBq of the smaller nanocolloid in 0.4 cc saline divided over four sites, around the lesion or subdermally around the surgical scar. We utilize a low-energy, high-resolution LFOV camera for scintigraphy and a probe specific for the sentinel node during surgery. In 56/60 patients (93.3%) lymphoscintigraphy showed the sentinel node (SN). In two cases the SN was not detected presumably because of lymphatic interruption by an old surgical scar; in the other two cases the sites of injection were too close to the SN, thus masking it. In five cases (9%) the SN was not visualized with the surgical probe but in two of these drainage to the internal mammary chain was observed. The apparently lower sensitivity of intraoperative localization was due to the extra-axillary lymphatic drainage or to the vicinity of the SN to the primary lesion. The SN proved to be metastatic in 12 cases. No false-negative SNs were found. In five cases (10%) the radiolabeled lymph node was the only node containing tumor cells (micrometastases): this result depends on the combined use of hematoxylin-eosin and rapid cytokeratin staining. The application of blue dye was useful for easier identification of the SN but did not allow detection of more SNs. Our preliminary results are extremely encouraging. Considering that at the early stages of breast cancer the likelihood of lymph node metastases is low (20% in our series) and no false negative were reported in this study, we conclude that with SN biopsy axillary lymph node dissection can be avoided, making surgery less aggressive but maintaining accuracy.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 559-559
Author(s):  
Xingfei Yu ◽  
Linyan Zhou ◽  
Chen Yang ◽  
Yang Yu ◽  
Daobao Chen ◽  
...  

559 Background: Early breast cancer (cT1-2N0) with one or two sentinel lymph node (SLN) involved may avoid axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) if follow by radiotherapy supported by Z0011 and AMAROS trials. However, only less than one-third of those patients have positive non-sentinel lymph node (nSLN) and can truly benefit from radiotherapy or ALND in those two trials. It is necessary to identify the risk of nSLN metastasis before local treatment decision. We previously developed a predictive model for nSLN involvement using circulating CK19 mRNA level combined with contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) score (ASCO2017 poster 239, NCT02992067) in a training set. To evaluate the predict effect of this model, we designed a further study using the model prospectively in a validation set (NCT03280134). Methods: We identified early breast cancer cases in Zhejiang Cancer Hospital from July 2017 to June 2018. The level of circulating CK19 mRNA tested by qRT-PCR and CEUS scores were collected before surgery in each case. Patients with 1~2 SLN involved were enrolled and continued for ALND. The estimated percentage of nSLN-involved were calculated both by our model formula and the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) nomogram. The predictive accuracy and false negative rates (FNR) were evaluated and the area under curve (AUC) was compared between two predictive models. Results: Totally, 235 patients diagnosed as early breast cancer with 1~2 SLN involved were enrolled and 35.36% of them were nSLN involved after ALND. The total accuracy and FNR by our model for nSLN-involved prediction was 94.89% and 6.02%, respectively. The AUC was 0.952 (95%CI, 0.922~0.982), significantly higher than that in MSKCC model 0.880 (95%CI, 0.833~0.927). Furthermore, only CK19 mRNA level (HR = 40.091, 95%CI, 13.663~117.635) and CEUS score (HR = 2.009, 95%CI 1.158~3.485) are significantly related to nSLN involvement in both univariate and multivariate analysis, adjusted by age, menopause statue, tumor size, histological grade, estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor and human epidermalgrowth factor receptor-2 expression. Conclusions: Our model using CK19 mRNA and CEUS score showed potential predictive value of nSLN before surgery in early breast cancer patients. Further validation in larger multicenter cohort is warranted before changing clinical practice.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 172
Author(s):  
Alejandro Martin Sanchez ◽  
Daniela Terribile ◽  
Antonio Franco ◽  
Annamaria Martullo ◽  
Armando Orlandi ◽  
...  

Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) following neoadjuvant treatment (NACT) has been questioned by many studies that reported heterogeneous identification (IR) and false negative rates (FNR). As a result, some patients receive axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) regardless of response to NACT, leading to a potential overtreatment. To better assess reliability and clinical significance of SLNB status on ycN0 patients, we retrospectively analyzed oncological outcomes of 399 patients treated between January 2016 and December 2019 that were either cN0-ycN0 (219 patients) or cN1/2-ycN0 (180 patients). The Endpoints of our study were to assess, furthermore than IR: oncological outcomes as Overall Survival (OS); Distant Disease Free Survival (DDFS); and Regional Disease Free Survival (RDFS) according to SLNB status. SLN identification rate was 96.8% (98.2% in patients cN0-ycN0 and 95.2% in patients cN+-ycN0). A median number of three lymph nodes were identified and removed. Among cN0-ycN0 patients, 149 (68%) were confirmed ypN0(sn), whereas regarding cN1/2-ycN0 cases 86 (47.8%) confirmed an effective downstaging to ypN0. Three year OS, DDFS and RDFS were significantly related to SLNB positivity. Our data seemed to confirm SLNB feasibility following NACT in ycN0 patients, furthermore reinforcing its predictive role in a short observation timing.


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