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Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Breast Cancer Published on Cancer Network (http://www.cancernetwork.com) Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Breast Cancer Review Article [1] | January 01, 1999 | Breast Cancer [2] By Hiram S. Cody III, MD [3] Sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy is a rapidly emerging treatment option for patients with early-stage invasive breast cancer and a clinically negative axilla. In the era of mammographic detection, SLN biopsy has the potential to eliminate axillary dissection for the enlarging cohort of breast cancer patients who are node-negative. Using radioisotope, blue dye, or both methods, experienced surgeons can successfully localize SLNs in more than 90% of cases. The effects of isotope and blue dye may be additive. Sentinel lymph node biopsy reliably predicts axillary node status in 98% of all patients and 95% of those who are node-positive. The operation is best learned under a formalized protocol in which a backup axillary dissection is performed to validate the technique during the surgeon’s early experience. Enhanced pathologic analysis, including serial sections and immunohistochemical (IHC) staining, is an essential element of the procedure. In experienced hands, SLN biopsy has less morbidity and greater accuracy than conventional axillary dissection. [ONCOLOGY 1(13):25-34, 1999] Introduction xillary node dissection has long been a mainstay in the treatment of breast cancer: It provides precise staging and prognostication, prevents local recurrence in the axilla, and, in patients with positive nodes, may modestly enhance survival[1]—all important goals in a disease that responds to both local and systemic therapy and has a long natural history. To date, no procedure has proven as effective as axillary lymph node dissection in accomplishing these goals. Nevertheless, axillary dissection is a major operation, requires general anesthesia, and produces long-term morbidity in a small, but significant, minority of patients. A Within the last 2 years, sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy (Figure 1) has rapidly emerged as the most exciting development in the surgical treatment of invasive breast cancer since the advent of breast conservation. It has the potential to identify those patients most likely to be helped by axillary dissection (ie, those with positive nodes) and to spare node-negative patients, who cannot benefit, from the morbidity of an operation. Undoubtedly, sentinel lymph node biopsy will rapidly become a standard treatment option for all patients with early-stage breast cancer and will replace axillary dissection for many of these patients. After a brief description of the history of SLN biopsy, this review will discuss the feasibility and accuracy of the procedure, as well as some of the technical and clinical issues raised by this new technology. It will also attempt to answer a key question: Where will SLN biopsy ultimately fit into the treatment algorithm for breast cancer in the 21st century? Historical Background on SLN Biopsy Most physicians are familiar with Sappey’s classic studies of the lymphatic anatomy of the chest wall,[2] based on mercurial injection of cadaver specimens. The lymphatics of the chest wall and breast converge into a few main trunks, which, in turn, drain into relatively few nodes low in the axilla. These studies formed the anatomic basis of the complete axillary dissection incorporated into radical mastectomy by Halsted in the 1890s.[3] The internal mammary nodes represent an alternative route of lymphatic drainage, but, as shown in the work of Turner-Warwick[4] and others, receive only a small fraction of the lymphatic flow of the breast. The underlying simplicity of the lymphatic anatomy of the breast was emphasized in subsequent studies using direct lymphangiography.[5,6] As pointed out by Borgstein and Meijer[7] in a recent comprehensive overview of the subject, work by Kett et al[6] in 1970 identified a lymph node (which they called the “Sorgius node”) that received the initial drainage of contrast medium from the breast. The phrase “sentinel node” must be credited to Cabanas,[8] who, in 1977 described cannulation of the dorsal lymphatics of the penis as a means of identifying the first lymph node (“sentinel node”) Page 1 of 9 Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Breast Cancer Published on Cancer Network (http://www.cancernetwork.com) draining penile carcinoma. He noted that the sentinel node was frequently the only positive node, and proposed that if the sentinel node were negative, a deep inguinal node dissection might be avoided. In the 1980s, Morton and colleagues independently developed the sentinel node concept as an outgrowth of their work mapping the drainage patterns of cutaneous melanoma with lymphoscintigraphy. Their classic 1992 study[9] described the intradermal injection of blue dye into the melanoma site and the identification of a “blue node” in the regional nodal basin. Among 237 node basins studied (with a standard node dissection performed in all cases), SLNs were identified in 82% of patients. Sentinel lymph node biopsy correctly predicted regional node status in 99% of successful procedures and 95% of node-positive cases (38/40). As recently reviewed by Brady and Coit,[10] 10 groups have since reported comparable or better results using SLN biopsy (blue dye and/or radioisotope localization) in melanoma. Overview of SLN Biopsy in Breast Cancer The use of SLN biopsy in breast cancer was first reported in 1993 by Krag et al,[11] who employed radiolocalization, and in 1994 by Giuliano et al,[12] who employed blue dye. In the study by Krag et al, isotope identified the SLN in 82% of 22 cases, with 100% accuracy. In the report of Giuliano et al, blue dye identified the SLN in 65% of 173 cases, with 96% accuracy. Since these pioneering reports, 14 groups have published their results with SLN biopsy for breast cancer, validated in all cases by a concurrent axillary node dissection. Of the 14 groups, 7 used isotope localization,[13-19] 3 used blue dye,[20-22] and 4 used a combination of both methods.[23-26] Table 1 summarizes the results of all 1,564 reported cases. Success in Identifying the SLN Regardless of method, SLNs were identified by all of the investigators in a large majority of cases. The 66% success rate for blue dye in the initial 1994 report of Giuliano et al[12] may simply reflect the developmental stage of a new procedure; in this group’s more recent experience,[20] blue dye successfully identified the SLN in 93% of cases. Overall, radioisotope localization appears to find the SLN more frequently than does blue dye, and the combination of isotope plus dye appears to be superior to isotope localization alone in these pilot studies. Accuracy in Predicting Axillary Node Status Sentinel lymph node biopsy yielded an incorrect result in 2% of all patients (for an accuracy of 98%) and 5% of node-positive patients (for a sensitivity of 95%). Although nearly half of the series (7 of 16) reported an accuracy of 100%, these comprise only 23% of the total number of cases. No diagnostic test is perfect, and the accuracy of SLN biopsy is probably slightly less than 100%. Validation of the SLN Hypothesis As shown in Table 1, the SLN was the only site of nodal metastasis in 45% (range, 33% to 67%) of all node-positive cases, strongly supporting the SLN concept. If the SLNs were examined for micrometastatic disease with enhanced pathology (serial sectioning, with both hematoxylin and eosin [H&E] and immunohistochemical [IHC] staining), one might question whether equally close examination of the nonsentinel axillary nodes would also find micrometastases, undermining the uniqueness of the SLN as the true “first node.” Turner et al[27] have conducted an elegant histopathologic validation of the SLN hypothesis (Table 2). Among 60 patients whose SLNs were negative on both frozen and serial sections (using H&E and IHC), all of whom underwent axillary dissection with serial sectioning of all of the remaining axillary nodes, only 1 (0.1%) of 1,087 nonsentinel nodes contained tumor. Technical Issues Related to SLN Biopsy Because the SLN technology is evolving rapidly, variation in technique is widespread, and anecdote rather than controlled observation has been the rule. Nevertheless, all of those who perform SLN biopsy would agree that it is a multidisciplinary procedure requiring close collaboration among nuclear medicine (for institutions using radiolocalization), surgery, and pathology. A summary of some pertinent technical issues relevant to each specialty follows. Nuclear Medicine Localization of the SLN represents a new challenge for the specialty of nuclear medicine, with requirements quite different from those of solid organ imaging. The behavior of injected radiocolloids is largely a function of particle size and interstitial pressure. The largest particles (> 200 nm) simply remain at the injection site, and the smallest (< 5 nm) rapidly disperse into the bloodstream. Particles between 5 to 10 nm in size rapidly enter the lymphatics but spread into numerous nodes. Page 2 of 9 Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Breast Cancer Published on Cancer Network (http://www.cancernetwork.com) Sentinel lymph node localization depends on a small fraction of the injected isotope dose (perhaps 1%) migrating consistently to relatively few regional nodes, and optimal particle size is probably between 10 and 200 nm. Interstitial pressure, which must be elevated for lymphatic uptake of particles to occur, is related to both route (intradermal vs intramammary) and volume of injection: Lymphatic uptake of isotope may be greater with either a high-pressure intradermal injection or a high-volume intramammary injection. American investigators have used technetium-99m sulfur colloid,[11,18,23,25] while European studies have employed technetium-99m colloidal albumin.[13-17,24,26] The particle size in technetium-99m sulfur colloid preparations is particularly subject to wide variation; this may be reflected in the somewhat less consistent results reported for radiolocalization in the American literature. One might assume that intramammary injection of isotope, as was done in the studies from America and Holland,[11,14-18,23-25] would most accurately emulate the lymphatic drainage of a breast cancer. Interestingly, in the two series from Milan,[13,16] lymphatic mapping based on a subdermal injection of isotope over the tumor site was equally successful and accurate in predicting axillary node status. The dermal and parenchymal lymphatics of the breast may simply drain to the same SLN. Investigators using technetium-99m sulfur colloid typically inject 0.3 to 1.0 mCi in a volume of 4 mL of normal saline around the tumor (or biopsy site) 1 to 4 hours prior to operation,[11,18,23,25,26] whereas those using technetium-99m colloidal albumin inject 0.1 to 1.6 mCi either subdermally or into the breast about 24 hours in advance of surgery.[13-17,24] Filtration of technetium-99m sulfur colloid prior to injection produces greater uniformity of particle size, and has become standard practice in lymphatic mapping for melanoma.[10] The smaller particles rapidly traverse the lymphatic vessels and regional nodes, helping to identify anomalous patterns of lymphatic drainage on preoperative lymphoscintigraphy. In our experience performing SLN radiolocalization for breast cancer at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, we have noted a higher failure rate with filtered than with unfiltered technetium-99m sulfur colloid.[28] Therefore, we continue to use an unfiltered preparation, as initially recommended by Krag et al.[11,18] In contrast, Albertini et al[23] have reported good results with filtered technetium-99m sulfur colloid. Lymphoscintigraphy is a well-established component of lymphatic mapping for melanoma. It identifies anomalous patterns of lymphatic drainage, which, in turn, directly alter the surgical approach. This examination is probably less useful on a routine basis in breast cancer, where the primary focus is the axilla. Management of the 14% of patients who demonstrate internal mammary drainage[25] is a new, unresolved problem. Surgery The surgeon’s objective is simply to find the SLN as consistently as possible. Each failed localization will result in an axillary dissection that might not otherwise have been necessary. Debate centers on which method is best to accomplish this objective: isotope, blue dye, or both? Table 1 suggests that all three approaches work. With isotope, as first described by Krag et al,[11] the surgeon uses a handheld gamma probe intraoperatively to find the axillary “hot spot(s)” corresponding to the SLN(s) and removes hot node(s) until the axillary background radiation count falls below a defined threshold level . With blue dye, as described by Giuliano et al,[12] the surgeon identifies blue lymphatic vessels exiting the tail of the breast and traces them to a blue-stained SLN in the axilla, removing all blue nodes. All blue and/or hot nodes are removed and submitted for pathologic examination. Early in the surgeon’s experience, SLN biopsy is best validated by the performance of a backup axillary dissection (as part of a formalized protocol) after removal of the SLN. The learning curve for this procedure varies from institution to institutions and surgeon to surgeon. At present, it is impossible to specify exactly how many procedures should be done with validation before SLN biopsy can be performed as a “stand-alone” procedure. In our experience performing more than 800 SLN biopsies at Memorial Sloan-Kettering, we have found that failed SLN localizations diminish but do not altogether disappear with experience; the results of other investigators (Table 1) support this impression. We advocate the combined use of isotope and blue dye for SLN biopsy (Figure 2): Although 80% of SLNs were found by both isotope and dye, 10% were found by isotope alone, and 10% by blue dye alone. This additive effect of isotope and blue dye was first noted by Albertini et al,[23] and was confirmed by our initial experience[25] and that of Barnwell et al.[26] The surgeon’s greatest concern in undertaking SLN biopsy is that the SLN will prove to be falsely Page 3 of 9 Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Breast Cancer Published on Cancer Network (http://www.cancernetwork.com) negative. False-negative SLN biopsies (like failed SLN localizations) also diminish over time. Our experience suggests that about half of all falsely negative SLN biopsies will occur within the first 10 cases performed by each surgeon. No studies have specifically addressed the relative value of isotope and blue dye in finding the positive SLN. However, our experience suggests that while most positive SLNs will be found by both isotope and blue dye, a small fraction (perhaps 10%) will be found by either isotope or blue dye alone. Although others have achieved excellent results with a single modality (Table 1), the reliability of SLN biopsy in our hands would have been undermined by reliance on a single localization technique. Pathology The most crucial element in SLN biopsy is enhanced pathologic analysis of the SLN. Reporting on the early experience with melanoma, Gershenwald et al[29] found that 4.1% (10/243) of patients with negative SLNs (by routine single-section pathologic examination) later developed a local relapse in the undissected nodal basin. Reanalysis of the “negative” SLNs in these 10 patients (with serial sections and IHC stains) demonstrated that 80% were, in fact, positive. Thus, an increasing number of investigators performing SLN biopsy for breast cancer have relied on serial sectioning of the SLN, with both H&E and IHC staining of each section. The IHC technique uses antibodies to cytokeratin and, thus, identifies epithelial cells that are presumed to represent metastases from the breast (Figure 3). Although no authors have reported the occurrence of a “falsely positive” SLN in breast cancer, benign rests of epithelial cells (typically melanocytes) in the subcapsular area of a lymph node may occasionally be mistaken for metastasis; we have encountered 1 such case in our first 600 SLN biopsies. Reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) technology has the exciting potential to identify metastases even smaller than those found by IHC, but thus far has proven to be problematic in the study of SLNs from breast cancer patients. First, since breast cancer has no unique marker (such as tyrosinase for melanoma), the analysis must depend on nonspecific epithelial cell products. As a result, there is no way to be certain that the amplified gene product obtained was expressed specifically by a tumor cell within the node. In addition, the level of expression at which a result is defined as positive or negative is somewhat arbitrary and allows considerable latitude in the interpretation of results. Thus, RT-PCR for SLN analysis in breast cancer remains investigational at present. Patient Selection In general, patients selected as candidates for SLN biopsy have had T1 or T2 invasive breast cancers and clinically negative axillary nodes. Some specific issues related to patient selection are the following: Palpable Axillary Nodes—In general, patients with clinically positive axillae have been excluded from SLN biopsy. Reactive nodes that appear post-biopsy are not a contraindication. Previous Surgical Biopsy—Although some investigators have avoided performing SLN biopsy in patients who have had a previous excisional biopsy,[13,14,16,23] others (ourselves included) have observed equal success with SLN localization regardless of the prior biopsy method.[17,18,25,26] A very large biopsy cavity, especially in the upper outer quadrant of the breast, has the potential to extensively disrupt the lymphatics on which the accuracy of SLN biopsy depends. Therefore, we agree entirely with Ollila and Giuliano[30] in discouraging SLN biopsy in this setting, where we have observed a disproportionate number of our failed and false-negative procedures. Intraductal Carcinoma—Since axillary node metastasis occurs in fewer than 1% of patients with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), most patients with DCIS do not require any axillary surgery. The exception may be patients with DCIS and a mass, in which the presence of invasion cannot be ruled out absolutely prior to surgery. Microinvasive Cancers—Axillary metastasis occurs in patients with microinvasive cancers but does so very infrequently (probably in < 5% of such patients). Sentinel lymph node biopsy is ideal in this setting, particularly in younger patients, in whom the decision of whether to recommend systemic therapy hinges entirely on the biopsy result. Histologically Favorable Tumors—Patients with tubular, medullary, or colloid cancers are all less likely to be node-positive than are patients with invasive duct cancers of comparable size. Consequently, SLN biopsy is ideal for these groups. Large Tumors—In our initial experience,[25] SLN biopsy was more accurate in patients with T1 tumors (45/46; 98%) than in those with T2 cancers (10/12; 83%). This difference may simply reflect Page 4 of 9 Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Breast Cancer Published on Cancer Network (http://www.cancernetwork.com) the greater likelihood of node-positivity in patients with larger tumors. Our subsequent experience suggests that SLN biopsy is falsely negative in a relatively fixed percentage of node-positive patients, and that, with experience, this fraction falls to about 5%. This corresponds quite well with the overall false-negative rate of 5% (ie, sensitivity of 95%) noted for all of the published series to date (Table 1). Reassuringly, no authors have yet reported a false-negative SLN biopsy for a breast cancer < 1.0 cm, and, by current standards, almost all patients with tumors ≥ 1 cm receive systemic adjuvant therapy regardless of nodal status. Multicentric tumors raise the possibility of identifying the “wrong” SLN and, in general, should be excluded from SLN biopsy. Exceptions may be tumors that are relatively contiguous, or tumors that contain a small invasive lesion within an extensive in situ component. In these settings, the isotope and/or dye injections would be administered near the invasive lesion. Patients Needing Mastectomy—Sentinel lymph node biopsy is just as feasible in patients undergoing a mastectomy as in those having breast conservation, as long as the extent of the invasive portion of the tumor is relatively well-defined. Unexpectedly Extensive Cancers—In some patients, tumors that appear to be small on mammography prove, on wide excision, to have an unexpectedly extensive invasive component (as may be the case with some invasive lobular cancers) and require either reexcision or mastectomy. In these cases, a negative SLN result should be regarded cautiously, and a conventional axillary dissection should be considered as part of the second procedure. In an effort to define and standardize criteria for case selection, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN), a consortium of 16 US cancer centers, has recently modified its breast cancer treatment guidelines to include SLN biopsy (Table 3), incorporating many of the considerations discussed above. As SLN biopsy is rapidly integrated into both clinical practice and randomized trials, consistency in case selection and technique will assume increasing importance. Treatment Algorithm for SLN Biopsy At Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, our current approach to SLN biopsy involves the use of both isotope and blue dye lymphatic mapping. Based on our initial study,[25] patients with T1 breast cancers are candidates for SLN biopsy alone if the SLN is negative, while most patients with T2 cancers still undergo a planned axillary dissection at the time of SLN biopsy. The morning of surgery, patients are taken to the Department of Nuclear Medicine, where they receive 0.1 to 0.3 mCi of unfiltered technetium-99m sulfur colloid (CIS-US Inc., Bedford, MA) injected either into the breast parenchyma (adjacent to the tumor) or intradermally (overlying the tumor). A lymphoscintigram is then taken to visualize the sites of lymphatic drainage. A negative lymphoscintigram does not preclude successful radiolocalization at surgery. One to two hours post-injection, patients are taken to the operating room, where 4 mL of isosulfan blue dye is injected into the breast parenchyma adjacent to the tumor site. Within 5 to 10 minutes, the axilla is explored through a small transverse incision while the patient is under local anesthesia coupled with intravenous sedation (or general anesthesia if a mastectomy is planned). Guided by both a handheld gamma probe and direct visualization for blue dye staining, the surgeon removes all blue and/or hot sentinel nodes. In one-third of cases, a single SLN is found; the median number of SLN identified is two. The SLN is submitted for frozen-section examination, and, if this is positive, an immediate axillary node dissection is performed. If the frozen-section analysis is negative, the remainder of the node is embedded. Sections are taken from three levels within the node and stained using both H&E and IHC for cytokeratins (CAM5.2 and AE1:AE3; Becton Dickinson Immunocytometry Systems, San Jose, California). About 3% of patients with a negative frozen-section examination will have positive results on permanent sections. If either the H&E or IHC stain reveals tumor cells, the patient is returned to surgery for an axillary dissection. All patients with positive SLNs are treated conventionally as axillary node-positive cases and receive systemic chemotherapy and/or tamoxifen (Nolvadex) as appropriate. Specific Clinical Issues With respect to any medical intervention, the procedure requires justi-fication, and the results demand interpretation. This is certainly true of SLN biopsy. Indeed, this technology raises at least as many questions as it answers. A discussion of some specific issues follows. How Should the Predictive Value of SLN Biopsy Be Explained to Patients? The results of SLN biopsy may be presented in terms of sensitivity ([true positive]/[true positive + false negative]), false-negative rate ([false negative]/[true positive + false negative]), or accuracy Page 5 of 9 Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Breast Cancer Published on Cancer Network (http://www.cancernetwork.com) ([true positive + true negative]/[total patients]). All of these values are summarized in Table 1. Since most breast cancer patients present with a known tumor size and an unknown axillary node status, accuracy will be of greatest relevance to them. Patients want to know, “For a breast cancer of my size, how likely is SLN biopsy to yield an incorrect result?” Table 4 gives estimates of the accuracy of SLN biopsy based on tumor size, using the expected rate of axillary node involvement and assuming false-negative rates of both 10% (which might be expected early in one’s experience) and 5% (reflecting the published experience summarized in Table 1). These estimates should always be compared with the inaccuracy of conventional axillary dissection, which is well documented in the literature but very seldom discussed with patients. In three large series,[31-33] conventional single-section pathologic analysis of axillary nodes failed to identify prognostically significant micrometastatic disease in 9% to 24% of cases. Is There an Upper Tumor Size Limit Beyond Which SLN Biopsy Loses its Validity? Assuming that the false-negative rate for SLN biopsy does not vary with tumor size, the procedure may prove to be less accurate for large tumors, simply because the risk of node involvement increases with tumor size. However, there may be circumstances (ie, old age or serious comorbidities) in which the advantage to the patient of avoiding axillary dissection outweighs the very small risk of leaving residual nodal disease in the axilla. What is the Risk of Axillary Relapse After a Negative SLN Biopsy? No recurrences in the intact axilla have yet been reported in breast cancer patients after a negative SLN biopsy. The axillary recurrence rate for breast cancer is unlikely to be as high as the 4.1% rate observed (at 35 months’ follow-up) in the early SLN experience with melanoma.[29] Enhanced pathologic analysis, effective systemic therapy, and (for patients undergoing breast conservation) the possibility of a radiotherapy effect on the low axilla all act to minimize axillary relapse in the small percentage of patients whose SLN biopsy is falsely negative. Although the axillary recurrence rate will not be 0, it may actually prove to be comparable to the < 1% rate seen after conventional axillary dissection. Are Axillary Micrometastases Prognostically Significant? Serial sectioning and IHC stains can demonstrate micrometastatic disease with striking clarity. It is tempting to believe that these micrometastases are too small to be of any significance, and the older literature on this subject is contradictory. The 1990 Ludwig study[31] convincingly demonstrates otherwise. Among a cohort of 921 patients who were axillary node–negative on routine single section pathologic analysis, 9% were found to be node-positive on serial sections and had a 5 year disease-free survival that was 15% worse than those who were “truly” node-negative. Two other large studies from France[32](1992; 229 patients) and Australia[33] (1993; 343 patients) show similar results for patients whose micrometastases were found by IHC. Although these micrometastases may not carry the same prognostic weight as does gross nodal disease, both the surgeons and medical oncologists at our institution currently recommend systemic adjuvant treatment to almost all SLN-positive patients. Do Patients With Negative Frozen Sections But Positive H&E or IHC Stains Require Axillary Dissection? In approximately half of SLN-positive patients, the SLN is the only positive node (Table 1). In our first 500 cases, we have found that, among patients whose SLN was positive on either frozen section or H&E, about 40% had residual disease found at axillary dissection. Among those whose SLN was positive only on IHC, about 10% had residual disease. Because these data are based on relatively few (N = 126) node-positive cases, our current practice is to recommend axillary dissection for almost all SLN-positive patients. A future goal is to develop specific criteria to identify SLN-positive patients in whom axillary dissection may not be necessary. How Should an Internal Mammary SLN Be Managed? In our initial experience with SLN biopsy, routine preoperative lympho-scintigraphy identified internal mammary drainage in 14% of patients.[25] Positive internal mammary nodes carry a prognostic weight equal to that of positive axillary nodes, and 10% to 20% of axillary node–negative T1 breast cancer patients will have internal mam-mary node metastases.[34,35] This high-risk group will remain unidentified by current standards of practice and will receive no systemic treatment at all if their cancers are < 1.0 cm. Although internal mammary SLN biopsy is possible, both blue dye and radiolocalization are made difficult by the proximity of the breast injection site to the interspace containing the SLN. Our current practice is to consider internal mammary SLN biopsy for medially placed tumors < 1.0 cm, if either lymphoscintigraphy or the intraoperative gamma probe suggests internal mammary drainage of isotope. Page 6 of 9 Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Breast Cancer Published on Cancer Network (http://www.cancernetwork.com) Clinical Trials of SLN Biopsy Sentinel lymph node biopsy will be incorporated increasingly into clinical trials, either as a surrogate for conventional axillary dissection or to examine aspects of the procedure itself. To ensure reliable results nationwide, the SLN biopsy technique must be standardized, with validation on a site-by-site basis, defining acceptable levels both for successful SLN localization (at least 90%) and for false-negative procedures (perhaps 5% of node-positive cases). Table 5 summarizes four major multicenter trials of SLN biopsy that are either proposed or actively accruing patients.[36] The most ambitious of these trials is Giuliano’s two-part study, sponsored by the American College of Surgeons Oncology Group. Collectively, these four trials have the potential to define the significance of SLN and bone marrow micrometastases detected only by IHC, to determine whether axillary dissection is really necessary in patients whose SLN is positive by H&E, and to establish the accuracy of SLN biopsy in the community hospital setting. Conclusions The Fisher hypothesis,[37] familiar to all oncologists, has been the dominant conceptual model for breast cancer over the last 30 years. It proposes that the spread of breast cancer is not mechanistic and orderly; that regional lymph nodes are not simple filters, but rather, are indicators of a host-tumor relationship; that occult systemic metastases occur frequently and early in the tumor’s natural history; and that local control and survival are therefore unrelated. This thesis is always presented as a major theoretical advance over the anatomic Halstedian model,[3] which formed the basis of breast cancer surgery throughout most of the 20th century. In fact, the Halsted and Fisher hypotheses represent the two poles of a dichotomy that has always been artificial. Neither by itself is sufficient to explain breast cancer’s broad spectrum of clinical behavior, and yet the SLN concept simultaneously demonstrates the truth of both. In deference to Dr. Halsted, SLN biopsy clearly shows that the spread of breast cancer to regional nodes is anatomically defined, predictable, and orderly. A single SLN is involved surprisingly often, and a negative SLN predicts a negative axilla with remarkable accuracy. In deference to Dr. Fisher, SLN biopsy (through enhanced pathologic analysis) demonstrates that occult micrometastases occur more frequently than conventional techniques of axillary dissection would suggest, and that these occult metastases are significant predictors of systemic relapse. A surprising proportion of “node-negative” patients have micrometastatic disease, and through SLN biopsy have been correctly identified as candidates for systemic treatment. Sentinel node biopsy is an ingenious, simple, and accurate technique. It cannot explain the remarkable heterogeneity of breast cancer. What it can do, with minimal morbidity, is to define with a new level of precision where an individual cancer lies on that broad biological spectrum. Acknowledgment: The author wishes to thank Arnold D. K. Hill, MCH, FRCSI, Laura Liberman, MD, and Jeffrey A. Boyd, PhD, for their assistance in the preparation of this manuscript, and the Tow Foundation and Liz Claiborne Foundation for their philanthropic support of sentinel node mapping at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. References: 1. Petrek JA, Blackwood MM: Axillary dissection: current practice and technique. Curr Probl Surg 32:259-323, 1995. 2. Sappey PC: Anatomie, Physiologie, Pathologie des Vesseaux Lymphatiques Consideres chez l’Homme et les Vertebres. Paris, A. Delahaye and E. Lecrosnier, 1885. 3. Halsted WS: The results of operations for the cure of cancer of the breast performed at the Johns Hopkins Hospital from June 1889 to January 1894. Johns Hopkins Hosp Rep 4:297-350, 1894. 4. Turner-Warwick RT: The lymphatics of the breast. Br J Surg 46:574-582, 1959. Page 7 of 9 Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Breast Cancer Published on Cancer Network (http://www.cancernetwork.com) 5. Halsell JT, Smith JR, Bentlage CR, et al: Lymphatic drainage of the breast demonstrated by vital dye staining and radiography. Ann Surg 162:221-226, 1965. 6. Kett K, Varga G, Lukacs L: Direct lymphography of the breast. Lymphology 1:3-12, 1970. 7. Borgstein P, Meijer S: Historical perspective of lymphatic tumour spread and the emergence of the sentinel node concept. Eur J Surg Oncol 24:85-89, 1998. 8. Cabanas R: An approach for the treatment of penile carcinoma. Cancer 39:456-466, 1977. 9. Morton DL, Wen DR, Wong JH, et al: Technical details of intraoperative lymphatic mapping for early stage melanoma. Arch Surg 127:392-399, 1992. 10. Brady MS, Coit DG: Sentinel lymph node evaluation in melanoma. Arch Dermatol 133:1014-1020, 1997. 11. Krag DN, Weaver DL, Alex JC, et al: Surgical resection and radiolocalization of the sentinel lymph node in breast cancer using a gamma probe. Surg Oncol 2:335-340, 1993. 12. Giuliano AE, Kirgan DM, Guenther JM, et al: Lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymphadenectomy for breast cancer. Ann Surg 220:391-401, 1994. 13. Veronesi U, Paganelli G, Galimberti V, et al: Sentinel node biopsy to avoid axillary dissection in breast cancer with clinically negative lymph-nodes. Lancet 349:1864-1867, 1997. 14. Pijpers R, Hoekstra OS, Collet GJ, et al: Impact of lymphoscintigraphy on sentinel node identification with technetium-99m-colloidal albumin in breast cancer. 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J Clin Oncol 15:2345-2350, 1997. 21. Guenther JM, Krishnamoorthy M, Tan LR: Sentinel lymphadenectomy for breast cancer in a community managed care setting. Cancer J Sci Am 3:336-340, 1997. 22. Flett MM, Going JJ, Stanton PD, et al: Sentinel node localization in patients with breast cancer. Br J Surg 85:991-993, 1998. 23. Albertini JJ, Lyman GH, Cox C, et al: Lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy in the patient with breast cancer. JAMA 276:1818-1822, 1996. 24. Borgstein PJ, Meijer S, Pijpers R: Intradermal blue dye to identify sentinel lymph node in breast cancer. Lancet 349:1668-1669, 1997. Page 8 of 9 Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping in Breast Cancer Published on Cancer Network (http://www.cancernetwork.com) 25. O’Hea BJ, Hill ADK, El-Shirbiny A, et al: Sentinel lymph node biopsy in breast cancer: Initial experience at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. J Am Coll Surg 186:423-427, 1998. 26. Barnwell JM, Arredondo MA, Kollmorgen D, et al: Sentinel node biopsy in breast cancer. 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Source URL: http://www.cancernetwork.com/review-article/sentinel-lymph-node-mapping-breast-cancer-0 Links: [1] http://www.cancernetwork.com/review-article [2] http://www.cancernetwork.com/breast-cancer [3] http://www.cancernetwork.com/authors/hiram-s-cody-iii-md Page 9 of 9