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The Sentinel Node: 1) Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy 2) Ipsilateral Breast Cancer Recurrence EJW 2006 Basic Concepts Sentinel node (SLN) “biopsy” has been demonstrated to be remarkably accurate in evaluating the axilla for nodal metastases. It is at least as good for axillary assessment as axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) and probably superior.(White 2001) In the past, standard pathology evaluation of ALND nodes resulted in a 7-20% false negative result when re-evaluated by serial sectioning.(Dowlatshahi, Fan et al. 1999; Karalak and Homcha-Em 1999) SLN evaluation yields a 5-6% false negative rate. In “early” breast cancer, and even after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, studies show that when the sentinel node is positive it is the only positive lymph node about 50% of the time.(Breslin, Cohen et al. 2000; Villa, Gipponi et al. 2000) That fact may explain why standard evaluation tends to miss more positive axillary states than the more intensive study of the SLN. Additionally, long term follow-up of sentinel node negative patients with no ALND has recurrence rates of 1.5% or less.(Langer, Marti et al. 2005) From an axillary risk standpoint, even with a positive sentinel node and standard BCT Rx, axillary recurrence is rare.(Fant, Grant et al. 2003; Jeruss, Winchester et al. 2005) Survival after negative SLN treated with adjuvant Rx is superior to historical NSABP series with node negative standard ALND with adjuvant Rx, suggesting that missed positive nodes in old studies lead to errors in stage and prognosis. Improved data on modern SLN studies leads to more accurate classification.(Fuhrman, Gambino et al. 2005) Moreover, there is abundant data from randomized studies suggesting that axillary node dissection, per se, provides no benefit to overall survival.(Johansen, Kaae et al. 1990; Greco, Agresti et al. 2000; Fisher, Jeong et al. 2002; Zurrida, Orecchia et al. 2002; Louis-Sylvestre, Clough et al. 2004; Martelli, Boracchi et al. 2005) This may be especially true in the setting of BCT where chemotherapy and radiation therapy functionally target any “missed” axillary disease.(Wong, Recht et al. 1997; Gervasoni, Taneja et al. 2000; Chung, DiPetrillo et al. 2002; Lee, Doliny et al. 2004; Low, Berman et al. 2004; Hennessy, Hortobagyi et al. 2005; Cox, Cox et al. 2006) The recent development of multigene assays 1 capable of predicting pCR may further limit the need for axillary dissection to those proven to be at high risk of incomplete response.(Lymberis, Parhar et al. 2004; Hess, Anderson et al. 2006) These studies were performed on RNA obtained by FNA of the tumor. Therefore SLN (selective sentinel-lymphadenectomy) is extraordinarily useful in obtaining needed information for treatment planning while minimizing risk and morbidity. Sentinel node: Next Level questions There are new settings (previously thought to be contraindications) in which sentinel node evaluation may be useful. • Peri- neoadjuvant chemotherapy, (i.e. post or pre neoadjuvant.) • Ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR) with prior axillary interventions. Post Neo-adjuvant Chemotherapy Axillary Node Issues Neoadjuvant chemotherapy has become increasingly used in the setting of more advanced local disease. Originally used in inflammatory breast cancer, it has been recently extended to locally advanced non-inflammatory cases in the hope of reducing subsequent mortality as yet with no proof in that application. Trends suggesting benefit in overall survival were noted in nine year follow-up in the B-18 trials for pre-menopausal patients, but worsened survival was noted in post-menopausal patients, and the net effect was no overall change in survival.(Wolmark, Wang et al. 2001) (These issues may prove to be very different with her-2-neu positive patients treated with herceptin.)(Arnould, Gelly et al. 2006) Many studies show an approximate 25% complete pathologic response (cPR) to neo adjuvant chemotherapy. That response predicts for a better long-term outcome. However, recent evidence suggests that gene expression profiles of the tumor will allow accurate prediction of cPR, possibly eliminating the need for the clinical “test”.(Hess, Anderson et al. 2006) Certainly a significant number of patients can be converted to BCT rather than mastectomy by neoadjuvant chemotherapy, though there can be substantial theoretical questions about this approach, (e.g., does the known increase risk for local recurrence after conversion to BCT contribute to decreased overall survival and cancel the benefit of neoadjuvant treatment?)(Rouzier, Mathieu et al. 2004; Schwartz 2005; Viswambharan, Kadambari et al. 2005; Huang, Strom et al. 2006; Kaufmann, Dauphine et al. 2006; Loibl, von Minckwitz et al. 2006) 2 With the increased frequency of neoadjuvant therapy there has not been a standard approach to the axillary nodes. It would be appropriate to consider some standards. The fundamental question underlying this analysis will be: “What do we want to know and why do we think we want to know it” • Is sentinel node ID possible in this setting? • Is the sentinel node concept meaningful in this setting? I.e. => (Will it change therapy/ Surgery, Chemo or Rad Rx?) • Does a positive sentinel node imply additional positive nodes? • Can ALND be avoided if SLN Negative? • Should the approach for clinical N0 be different from N1/N2 patients? • Should SLN BX be done pre Neoadj Rx (instead of or in addition to) • Should a positive sentinel node in the Axillary Node Dissection Group lead to more detailed study of additional nodes? If a sentinel node is positive, added levels used to evaluate non-sentinel nodes may result in ~ 20% positive non-sentinel node? (Will evidence of additional positive nodes change Rx.) • In ALND patients, it is the sentinel node “positive” by SLN protocol, remainder “negative” by standard protocol that may be significant. If the sentinel node is not identified the positive status may be missed, since it may be the only positive node 50% of the time. If ALND “only”, without SLN ID, then may miss metastases (at only two levels per node). SLN the Only + node ~30-50%(Reitsamer, Peintinger et al. 2003; Mamounas, Brown et al. 2005) Other Issues • Sentinel node count may be lower post neoadjuvant Rx(Neuman, Carey et al. 2006) • What is the correlation between in breast CPR and nodal CPR. Can true CPR in the axilla be based on “standard pathology” of a standard ALND? Axillary Nodes After Neoadjuvant ChemoRx Le Bouedec, Geissler, et al 2006(Le Bouedec, Geissler et al. 2006) • 74 pts T1T2T3N0N1 POST neo 3 • SLN 68/74 (92%) then ALND • Mets in 30/68 (44%) i.e. Neg 56% • False neg 14% But if clinically neg N0 pre RX then accuracy 100% and FN 0% • In 32 N1 patients accuracy 83% FN 25% • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Reitsamer, Peintinger, et al (2003)(Reitsamer, Peintinger et al. 2003) 30 Patients Stage II or III, Rx Neoadj Chemo Attempted SLN with completion ALND SLN 26 of 30 (86.7%) (could not ID SLN in 4 (13.3%) SLN accurate 25 of 26 (96.2%) 11 pts Neg SLN and Neg ALND 6 pts Pos SLN and Pos ALND 8 pts SLN pos and the only Pos node (~30%) 1 pt false-neg (1/15 = 6.7%) Cohen, Breslin, et al (2000)(Cohen, Breslin et al. 2000) 38 pts, stage II or III treated with neoadjuvant chemo SLN attempted then ALND If SLN neg then all other nodes 3 add’l levels + IHC SLN ID in 31 (82%) and accurate 28 (90%) 3 False neg 4 of 20 “neg” SLN with add’l studies + for occult mets (20%) Kinoshita, Takasugi, et al, 2006(Kinoshita, Takasugi et al. 2006) Post neo 77 pts Stage II and III Clinically node neg post Rx SLN then ALND SLN ID 72 of 77 (93.5%) 69 of 72 accurate (95.8%) 3 of 27 False Neg (11%) Mamounas, Brown et al NSABP B-27(Mamounas, Brown et al. 2005) • • • • 428 pts SLN then ALND SLN ID 89% with isotope +SLN the only + node in 56% (70 of 125) 4 • Of 218 Neg SLN nonsent + 15 => False neg 11% • • • • • • • • • Kuerer, Sahin, et al (1999)(Kuerer, Sahin et al. 1999) 191 pts “cyto +” ALN => neoadj chemo Surgery ALND 43 pts ALND “neg” re-eval confirmed Neg (add’l 1112 sections/half IHC) =>43 of 191 “+” converted to neg (23%) by neoadj chemo Of those 43, 11 were N1 and 32 were N2 If Converted to Neg: 5 yr surv = 87% If Residual Positive: 5 yr surv = 51% If Occult Positive (10%): 5 yr = 75% Proposed: maybe consider SLN POST-NEO PTS SLN SLN ID False Neg SLN Accurate Le Bouedec 74 PTs 2006 SL/ALND 68 (92%) 14% If cN0 pre 0% 83% 100% Reitsamer 30 2003 SLN/ALND Cohen 38 2000 SLN/ALND 26 86% 25/26 96% 31 82% 28/30 90% Kinoshita 77 2006 SLN/ALND B-27 428 72/77 93% 3/27 11% 89% 11% SLN only+ 8/30 30% 72/77 96% 70/125 56% SLN before Neo adjuvant Van Rijk, Nieweg, et al 2006(van Rijk, Nieweg et al. 2006) • Reviewed 18 studies SLN after neoRX, SLN ID 89%, FN 10% Then studied: 5 • • • • SLN in 25 T2 pre RX If pre SLN + then ALND after neoadj 10 pos SLN=>post Rx ALND=> 4 pts add’l nodes pos in compl ALND 14 SLN Neg pts=> no completion ALND =>no recurrence 18 mo • • • • • • • • Kahn, Sabel, et al 2005(Khan, Sabel et al. 2005) 91 patients pre neo axillary staging Pre neo SLN Bx path Neg 58% (53 pts) Pre neo Pos by US FNA or SLN 42% (38 pts) These 38 pts then Neo=>then ALND 33 of these SLN attempted, found 32 (97%) 33% of these Node Negative on ALND Residual disease 22 patients “False negative” 1 pt (4.5%) • • • • • • Cox,Cox, et al., 2006(Cox, Cox et al. 2006) 89 pts (42 palp or image+ histo proven; 47 cN0) 47 cN0 SLN preRX 82 of 89 + nodes 7 (8%) of 89 neg SLN=>no completion ALND (no recurrence in25 mo) 24 (27%) pCR axilla; 26% grp 1 and 33% grp 2 Demonstrated improved prognosis, avoided ALND 15%, improved staging 53% Comparison Jones, Zabicki, et al., 2005(Jones, Zabicki et al. 2005) • SLN ID rates better pre than post 100% vs 80.6% • Recommend SLN in cN0 pre Rx and question its use post neo Proposed • If accuracy is important to the overall treatment planning and sequencing, then pre-treatment workup requires staging the axilla. If clinically + or US + then Bx; if cN0 and US/N0 Then SLN Bx pretreatment 6 • If pre-treatment SLN is negative (with good mapping and careful assessment), then leave the axilla alone post treatment. • If pre-treatment SLN or US/FNA are positive, then post treatment ALND with SLN ID. • If post treatment axillary status is important in defining added treatment then repeat SLN and complete ALND with additional levels in non-SLNs if the SLN is positive. Next Question: IBTR The increased use of breast conservation therapy will continue to increase the number of patients who present with ipsilateral in breast recurrence (perhaps as high as 1-2% per year). In this setting prior axillary interventions (ALND or SLN Bx) have generally been performed. These “recurrences” represent both true recurrences (same site) and new primaries. In many of these patients the implication of node metastases, or lack thereof, should be equivalent to the original setting. If knowledge of the nodal status is therapeutically important, then reassessment is required. This may be particularly important in “late” recurrences that are more likely to be true new primaries. A number of studies have looked at the question of “repeat nodal evaluations”. Dinan, Nagle, et al 2005(Dinan, Nagle et al. 2005) • 16 pts second IBTR • Lymphoscintigraphy pos 69% • Ipsi ax, contra ax, supraclav (ipsi and contra) • • • • • Intra, Trifiro, et al, 2005(Intra, Trifiro et al. 2005) 79 pts recurrent disease prior SLN 18 pts cN0 ~ 26 mo after initial Dx/Rx Pre op ID SLN 100% with lymphoscintigrapy and SLN removed average 1.3 SLN pos in 2 patients At 12 mo no recurrences in pts SLN Neg w/o ALND Re-operative SLN 7 • • • • Taback, Nguyen, et al 2006(Taback, Nguyen et al. 2006) 15 pts prior Rx BCT with IBTR and prior SLN or ALND Preop Lymphoscintig + 11 (73%) 3 contralat ax, 5 ipsilat ax, 2 IM, 2 SC, 2 Intra pect Intraop ID 11 of 14, Mets in 3; 2 contralat ax and 1 ipsilat ax Individual Reports • Milardovic 2006 Epigastric node(Milardovic, Castellon et al. 2006) • Jackson 2006 IBTR prior neg now Pos SLN single pt(Jackson, Kim et al. 2006) • Agarwal 2005 Two pts prior BCT with ALND => IBTR => SLN contralateral +. SLN neg X 2(Agarwal, Heron et al. 2005) Newman 2006(Newman, Cimmino et al. 2006) • 14 LRR (10 previous ALND, 2 SLN, 2 no ax surg) • SLN ID 90% no mets, non ipsilat drainage in 65% Proposed • With IBTR and prior Ax RX SLN ID (a neo-SLN) is possible ~ 70% of the time, but the potential sites are many. Therefore lymphoscintigraphy and planning SLN Bx are justified if a change in therapy would occur; e.g. 1) If a positive ipsi- or contra- lateral axillary neo-SLN would then lead to ALND. 2) If a positive neo-SLN would lead to an increase in Chemo Rx or Rad Rx. (For internalmammary and supraclavicular nodes minimal data is available, but Chemo or Radiation are probably the only useful interventions if nodes are proven positive.) References: Agarwal, A., D. E. Heron, et al. (2005). "Contralateral uptake and metastases in sentinel lymph node mapping for recurrent breast cancer." J Surg Oncol 92(1): 48. 8 BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Sentinel lymph node mapping as a constitutive component in the staging process for invasive breast cancer continues to gain acceptance. We have identified two patients with recurrent invasive breast cancer in whom contralateral sentinel lymph node uptake and metastases, respectively, were detected. Such findings have not been previously reported in our review of the medical literature between 1966 and October 2004. METHODS: Sentinel lymph node mapping was performed on two patients with recurrent invasive breast cancer at our institution. At the time of their index diagnosis, both had received breast conserving surgery and an axillary lymph node dissection with post-operative radiotherapy (RT). All lymph nodes and margins of resection were without tumor. Both patients remained with no evidence of disease for years until routine serial screening mammography was interpreted as suspicious. Each underwent a stereotactic biopsy of the ipsilateral breast corresponding to the mammographic abnormality. Pathology confirmed invasive ductal carcinoma. Both patients refused the recommended salvage mastectomy. PRINCIPAL RESULTS: During a second attempt at breast conservation, sentinel lymph node mapping-which is typically contraindicated for patients with prior axillary surgery-revealed contralateral axillary uptake for both patients. The respective contralateral sentinel node was excised with pathology revealing no tumor in one case, and a microscopic focus of metastatic carcinoma in the second case. MAJOR CONCLUSION: Some patients may benefit from sentinel lymph node mapping prior to salvage mastectomy. Identifying uptake in a contralateral sentinel lymph node may change the multidisciplinary management of recurrent invasive breast cancer to include a contralateral axillary dissection, chemotherapy, and/or RT to the contralateral axilla. Arnould, L., M. Gelly, et al. (2006). "Trastuzumab-based treatment of HER2positive breast cancer: an antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity mechanism?" Br J Cancer 94(2): 259-67. This study evaluated by immunohistochemistry (IHC) immune cell response during neoadjuvant primary systemic therapy (PST) with trastuzumab in patients with HER2-positive primary breast cancer. In all, 23 patients with IHC 3+ primary breast cancer were treated with trastuzumab plus docetaxel. Pathological complete and partial responses were documented for nine (39%) and 14 (61%) patients, respectively. Case-matched controls comprised patients treated with docetaxel-based PST without trastuzumab (D; n=23) or PST without docetaxel or trastuzumab (non-taxane, non-trastuzumab, NT-NT; n=23). All surgical specimens were blind-analysed by two independent pathologists, with immunohistochemical evaluation of B and T lymphocytes, macrophages, dendritic cells and natural killer (NK) cells. Potential cytolytic cells were stained for Granzyme B and TiA1. HER2 expression was also evaluated in residual tumour cells. Trastuzumab treatment was associated with 9 significantly increased numbers of tumour-associated NK cells and increased lymphocyte expression of Granzyme B and TiA1 compared with controls. This study supports an in vivo role for immune (particularly NK cell) responses in the mechanism of trastuzumab action in breast cancer. These results suggest that trastuzumab plus taxanes lead to enhanced NK cell activity, which may partially account for the synergistic activity of trastuzumab and docetaxel in breast cancer. Breslin, T. M., L. Cohen, et al. (2000). "Sentinel lymph node biopsy is accurate after neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer [In Process Citation]." J Clin Oncol 18(20): 3480-6. PURPOSE: Sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy has proved to be an accurate method for detecting nodal micrometastases in previously untreated patients with early-stage breast cancer. We investigated the accuracy of this technique for patients with more advanced breast cancer after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients with stage II or III breast cancer who had undergone doxorubicin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy before breast surgery were eligible. Intraoperative lymphatic mapping was performed with peritumoral injections of blue dye alone or in combination with technetium-labeled sulfur colloid. All patients were offered axillary lymph node dissection. Negative sentinel and axillary nodes were subjected to additional processing with serial step sectioning and immunohistochemical staining with an anticytokeratin antibody to detect micrometastases. RESULTS: Fifty-one patients underwent SLN biopsy after neoadjuvant chemotherapy from 1994 to 1999. The SLN identification rate improved from 64.7% to 94.1%. Twenty-two (51.2%) of the 43 successfully mapped patients had positive SLNs, and in 10 of those 22 patients (45.5%), the SLN was the only positive node. Three patients had false-negative SLN biopsy; that is, the sentinel node was negative, but at least one nonsentinel node contained metastases. Additional processing revealed occult micrometastases in four patients (three in sentinel nodes and one in a nonsentinel node). CONCLUSION: SLN biopsy is accurate after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The SLN identification improved with experience. False- negative findings occurred at a low rate throughout the series. This technique is a potential way to guide the axillary treatment of patients who are clinically node negative after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Chung, M. A., T. DiPetrillo, et al. (2002). "Treatment of the axilla by tangential breast radiotherapy in women with invasive breast cancer." Am J Surg 184(5): 401-2. BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to determine if standard tangential breast radiation covered the sentinel lymph node in women with invasive breast cancer. METHODS: Women with invasive breast cancer treated by lumpectomy, radiotherapy and sentinel node biopsy at our institution were included in this study if the sentinel lymph node site had 10 been marked with a clip. Plain films were used to determine if the clip fell within the tangential fields. RESULTS: Between April 1999 and May 2001, 36 women with invasive breast cancer treated by lumpectomy, sentinel lymph node biopsy and breast radiation were identified. Median age was 56 years (range 34 to 80) with a median tumor size of 1.1 cm (range 0.3 to 2.9 cm). The clip marking the sentinel lymph node fell within the tangential fields in 34 of 36 (94%) of the patients. The radiation dose to the clip area was greater than 4,400 cGy in 50% of those calculated by threedimensional techniques. CONCLUSIONS: The sentinel lymph node is located within classic tangential fields in the overwhelming majority of women with invasive breast cancer. The extent of the radiation fields, and ultimately the final dose, may need to be modified if the intent is for prophylactic treatment. Cohen, L. F., T. M. Breslin, et al. (2000). "Identification and evaluation of axillary sentinel lymph nodes in patients with breast carcinoma treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy." Am J Surg Pathol 24(9): 1266-72. Sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy has been shown to predict axillary metastases accurately in early stage breast cancer. Some patients with locally advanced breast cancer receive preoperative (neoadjuvant) chemotherapy, which may alter lymphatic drainage and lymph node structure. In this study, we examined the feasibility and accuracy of SLN mapping in these patients and whether serial sectioning and keratin immunohistochemical (IHC) staining would improve the identification of metastases in lymph nodes with chemotherapy-induced changes. Thirtyeight patients with stage II or III breast cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy were included. In all patients, SLN biopsy was attempted, and immediately afterward, axillary lymph node dissection was performed. If the result of the SLN biopsy was negative on initial hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections, all axillary nodes were examined with three additional hematoxylin and eosin sections and one keratin IHC stain. SLNs were identified in 31 (82%) of 38 patients. The SLN accurately predicted axillary status in 28 (90%) of 31 patients (three false negatives). On examination of the original hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections, 20 patients were found to have tumor-free SLNs. With the additional sections, 4 (20%) of these 20 patients were found to have occult lymph node metastases. These metastatic foci were seen on the hematoxylin and eosin staining and keratin IHC staining. Our findings indicate that lymph node mapping in patients with breast cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy can identify the SLN, and SLN biopsy in this group accurately predicts axillary nodal status in most patients. Furthermore, serial sectioning and IHC staining aid in the identification of occult micrometastases in lymph nodes with chemotherapy-induced changes. Cox, C. E., J. M. Cox, et al. (2006). "Sentinel node biopsy before neoadjuvant chemotherapy for determining axillary status and treatment prognosis in locally 11 advanced breast cancer." Ann Surg Oncol 13(4): 483-90. BACKGROUND: Treatment of locally advanced breast cancer with neoadjuvant chemotherapy assesses an in vivo tumor response while increasing breast conservation. Axillary clearance of nodal disease after treatment defines prognostic stratification. Our study objective was to show that sentinel node staging before treatment can optimize posttreatment prognostic stratification in clinically N0 patients. METHODS: Eighty-nine patients with locally advanced breast cancer were treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Of these, 42 (47%) clinically palpable or image-detected nodes (cN+) were histologically confirmed before treatment (group 1), and 47 (53%) patients without palpable lymph nodes (cN0) had a sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy before treatment (group 2). Survival analysis was conducted with the Kaplan-Meier method. RESULTS: In groups 1 and 2, 82 (92%) of 89 patients had node-positive disease before treatment. Seven (8%) of 89 had negative SLNs and no completion axillary lymph node dissection, 24 (27%) patients had a complete pathologic axillary response (pCRAX; 11 [26%] of 42 in group 1 and 13 [33%] of 40 in group 2), and 58 (65%) of 89 had residual disease in the axilla. Breast-conserving therapy was applied to 27 (30%) of 89 patients. The seven SLN-negative patients had no axillary recurrence at 25 months, and pCRAX patients had a significantly higher overall survival than patients with residual disease. CONCLUSIONS: This study validates the prognostic stratification of patients with a complete pathologic axillary response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The addition of SLN biopsy to cN0 patients before treatment increased accurate nodal staging by 53%, eliminated completion axillary lymph node dissection in 15%, and demonstrated an improved prognosis in 28% of pCRAX patients. SLN biopsy before treatment provides accurate staging of cN0 patients; allows acquisition of standard treatment markers, prognostic biomarkers, and microarray analysis; and affords prognostic stratification after treatment. Dinan, D., C. E. Nagle, et al. (2005). "Lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy in women with an ipsilateral second breast carcinoma and a history of breast and axillary surgery." Am J Surg 190(4): 614-7. BACKGROUND: Women with a history of breast and axillary surgery may demonstrate aberrant lymphatic drainage caused by disrupted lymphatic channels. Lymphoscintigraphy may be valuable in evaluation and staging of an ipsilateral second breast carcinoma. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective review of 16 women treated for a second ipsilateral breast carcinoma who underwent breast lymphoscintigraphy and intraoperative lymphatic mapping. Drainage patterns were compared with pathologic and operative findings. RESULTS: Lymphoscintigraphy succeeded in 69% of patients and demonstrated widely varied drainage patterns including ipsilateral axillary and supraclavicular as well as contralateral axillary and supraclavicular basins. No trend between successful lymphatic mapping and multiple clinical and pathologic measures was seen. CONCLUSIONS: 12 In women with a second ipsilateral breast carcinoma and history of previous breast and axillary surgery, lymphoscintigraphy is feasible. Drainage patterns vary widely including across the midline of the thorax. Preoperative lymphoscintigraphy may be useful to ensure inclusion of potential sentinel nodes within the operative field. Dowlatshahi, K., M. Fan, et al. (1999). "Occult metastases in the sentinel lymph nodes of patients with early stage breast carcinoma: A preliminary study [see comments]." Cancer 86(6): 990-6. BACKGROUND: Thirty percent of lymph node negative patients with operable breast carcinoma experience disease recurrence within 10 years. Retrospective serial sectioning of axillary lymph nodes has revealed undetected metastases in 9-30% of these patients. These occult metastases have been shown to have an adverse effect on survival. Serial sectioning (SS) is impractical for all axillary lymph nodes harvested from Levels I and II, but it is feasible if applied only to sentinel lymph nodes. METHODS: Sentinel lymph nodes from 52 patients with invasive breast carcinoma were cut at 2 mm intervals, fixed in 10% formalin, and embedded in paraffin. Sections were taken from the blocks, stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H & E), and compared with cytokeratin-stained sections taken at 0.25 mm intervals throughout the entire blocks. RESULTS: Tumor metastases were found in 6 patients (12%) when the sentinel lymph nodes were sectioned at 2 mm intervals and stained with H & E, compared with 30 patients (58%) when the same lymph nodes were serially sectioned at 0.25 mm intervals and stained with cytokeratin. Of 24 patients whose metastases were detected by SS and cytokeratin staining, 12 had isolated tumor cells and 12 had colonies of several thousand malignant cells. CONCLUSIONS: Routine histologic examination of axillary lymph nodes, including sentinel lymph nodes, in cases of breast carcinoma significantly underestimates lymph node metastases. This deficiency may be overcome by SS of the entire lymph nodes and staining with a specific monoclonal antibody. The percentage of patients found to have colonies of cells that were missed by routine sectioning corresponds closely to the percentage of "lymph node negative" patients who would be expected to relapse. The true clinical significance of these occult metastases will be determined by long term follow-up. [See editorial on pages 905-7, this issue.] Copyright 1999 American Cancer Society. Fant, J. S., M. D. Grant, et al. (2003). "Preliminary outcome analysis in patients with breast cancer and a positive sentinel lymph node who declined axillary dissection." Ann Surg Oncol 10(2): 126-30. BACKGROUND: This retrospective study was designed to provide a preliminary outcome analysis in patients with positive sentinel nodes who declined axillary dissection. METHODS: A review was conducted of patients who underwent lumpectomy and sentinel lymph node excision for invasive disease between January 1998 and July 2000. Those who were 13 found to have sentinel lymph node metastasis without completion axillary dissection were selected for evaluation. Follow-up included physical examination and mammography. RESULTS: Thirty-one patients were identified who met inclusion criteria. Primary invasive cell types included infiltrating ductal carcinoma, infiltrating lobular carcinoma, and mixed cellularity. Most primary tumors were T1. Nodal metastases were identified by hematoxylin and eosin stain and immunohistochemistry. Twenty-seven of the metastases were microscopic (<2 mm), and the remaining four were macroscopic. All patients received adjuvant systemic therapy. With a mean follow-up of 30 months, there have been no patients with axillary recurrence on physical examination or mammographic evaluation. CONCLUSIONS: We have presented patients with sentinel lymph nodes involved by cancer who did not undergo further axillary resection and remain free of disease at least 1 year later. This preliminary analysis supports the inclusion of patients with subclinical axillary disease in trials that randomize to observation alone. Fisher, B., J. H. Jeong, et al. (2002). "Twenty-five-year follow-up of a randomized trial comparing radical mastectomy, total mastectomy, and total mastectomy followed by irradiation." N Engl J Med 347(8): 567-75. BACKGROUND: In women with breast cancer, the role of radical mastectomy, as compared with less extensive surgery, has been a matter of debate. We report 25-year findings of a randomized trial initiated in 1971 to determine whether less extensive surgery with or without radiation therapy was as effective as the Halsted radical mastectomy. METHODS: A total of 1079 women with clinically negative axillary nodes underwent radical mastectomy, total mastectomy without axillary dissection but with postoperative irradiation, or total mastectomy plus axillary dissection only if their nodes became positive. A total of 586 women with clinically positive axillary nodes either underwent radical mastectomy or underwent total mastectomy without axillary dissection but with postoperative irradiation. Kaplan-Meier and cumulative-incidence estimates of outcome were obtained. RESULTS: No significant differences were observed among the three groups of women with negative nodes or between the two groups of women with positive nodes with respect to disease-free survival, relapsefree survival, distant-disease-free survival, or overall survival. Among women with negative nodes, the hazard ratio for death among those who were treated with total mastectomy and radiation as compared with those who underwent radical mastectomy was 1.08 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.91 to 1.28; P=0.38), and the hazard ratio for death among those who had total mastectomy without radiation as compared with those who underwent radical mastectomy was 1.03 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.87 to 1.23; P=0.72). Among women with positive nodes, the hazard ratio for death among those who underwent total mastectomy and radiation as compared with those who underwent radical mastectomy was 1.06 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.89 to 1.27; P=0.49). CONCLUSIONS: The 14 findings validate earlier results showing no advantage from radical mastectomy. Although differences of a few percentage points cannot be excluded, the findings fail to show a significant survival advantage from removing occult positive nodes at the time of initial surgery or from radiation therapy. Fuhrman, G. M., J. Gambino, et al. (2005). "5-year follow-up after sentinel node mapping for breast cancer demonstrates better than expected treatment outcomes." Am Surg 71(7): 564-9; discussion 569-70. We conducted this study to provide one of the initial assessments of treatment outcomes for breast cancer patients evaluated with sentinel node mapping. All patients diagnosed with breast carcinoma, evaluated with sentinel node mapping, and followed for 5 years were divided into three groups depending on sentinel node(s) status. Group I (node negative) included 91 patients, 77 with invasive cancer, and 7 lost to follow-up. Of the remaining 70 patients, 3 (4.3%) suffered a distant recurrence and died, 1 developed an in-breast recurrence, and 9 (12.9%) developed a contralateral cancer during the study. Group II (IHC positive) included 28 patients. One (3.6%) developed a distant recurrence and died of breast cancer, and one developed a contralateral cancer during follow. Group III (H&E positive) included 36 patients with 1 lost to follow-up. Five patients (14.3%) died of breast cancer and two (5.7%) developed contralateral carcinomas during follow-up. The most striking observation was a lower than expected rate of distant recurrences in these patients followed for 5 years after a diagnosis of breast cancer and staging with sentinel node mapping. The ability to identify subtle nodal metastasis and design appropriate systemic therapeutic strategies may explain this finding. Gervasoni, J. E., Jr., C. Taneja, et al. (2000). "Axillary dissection in the context of the biology of lymph node metastases." Am J Surg 180(4): 278-83. BACKGROUND: Modern breast surgery, as the primary treatment of invasive breast carcinoma, has been evolving over the last century. Aggressive radical surgery, which included chest wall resection, complete axillary clearance and internal mammary node dissection, has slowly changed to a less aggressive approach. This has been based on an improved understanding of the biology of the disease. Over the years, randomized prospective trials, performed at centers all over the world, have demonstrated that axillary dissection does not impact on the overall survival while it helps with loco-regional control of breast cancer. Its major role, at the present time, is limited to staging and prognostication; functions that are equally well served by the limited approach of a sentinel node biopsy. SOURCES: This review is based on the available medical literature involving the biology and organ specificity of the metastatic process, not only in breast cancer but also in other malignancies. In addition, studies pertaining to clinical breast cancer, and the role of 15 surgery in its treatment, were reviewed. The ongoing trials on the role of sentinel node biopsy in the management of the clinically node negative patients are discussed. CONCLUSIONS: This review covers the history, pathophysiology, and clinical basis of the current role of axillary dissection for invasive breast cancer. From the data presented we hope that the medical community will agree that there is no therapeutic role for extended axillary dissection at the current time. Greco, M., R. Agresti, et al. (2000). "Breast cancer patients treated without axillary surgery: clinical implications and biologic analysis." Ann Surg 232(1): 1-7. Hennessy, B. T., G. N. Hortobagyi, et al. (2005). "Outcome after pathologic complete eradication of cytologically proven breast cancer axillary node metastases following primary chemotherapy." J Clin Oncol 23(36): 9304-11. PURPOSE: Pathologic complete remission (pCR) of primary breast tumors after primary chemotherapy (PCT) is associated with higher relapse-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) rates. The purpose of this study was to determine long-term outcome in patients achieving pCR of cytologically proven axillary lymph node (ALN) metastases. METHODS: Patients with cytologically documented ALN metastases were treated in five prospective PCT trials. After surgery, patients were subdivided into those with and without residual ALN carcinoma. Survival was calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method. RESULTS: Of 925 patients treated, 403 patients had cytologically confirmed ALN metastases. Eighty-nine patients (22%) achieved ALN pCR after PCT. Compared with the group without ALN pCR, 5-year OS and RFS were improved in patients achieving ALN pCR (93% [95% CI, 87.5 to 98.5] and 87% [95% CI, 79.7 to 94.3] v 72% [95% CI, 66.5 to 77.5] and 60% [95% CI, 54.1 to 65.9], respectively; P < .0001). Residual primary tumor did not affect outcome of those with ALN pCR. Combination anthracycline/taxane-based PCT resulted in significantly more ALN pCRs, although outcome after ALN pCR was not improved by taxanes. We constructed a nomogram demonstrating that patients who do not benefit from neoadjuvant anthracyclines are unlikely to benefit from subsequent taxanes. CONCLUSION: ALN pCR is associated with an excellent prognosis, even with a residual primary tumor, pointing to biologic differences between primary and metastatic cells. ALN pCR represents an early surrogate marker of long-term outcome. Response to initial PCT has important potential as a guide to subsequent therapy. Hess, K. R., K. Anderson, et al. (2006). "Pharmacogenomic predictor of sensitivity to preoperative chemotherapy with paclitaxel and fluorouracil, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide in breast cancer." J Clin Oncol 24(26): 423644. PURPOSE: We developed a multigene predictor of pathologic complete response (pCR) to preoperative weekly paclitaxel and fluorouracil- 16 doxorubicin-cyclophosphamide (T/FAC) chemotherapy and assessed its predictive accuracy on independent cases. PATIENTS AND METHODS: One hundred thirty-three patients with stage I-III breast cancer were included. Pretreatment gene expression profiling was performed with oligonecleotide microarrays on fine-needle aspiration specimens. We developed predictors of pCR from 82 cases and assessed accuracy on 51 independent cases. RESULTS: Overall pCR rate was 26% in both cohorts. In the training set, 56 probes were identified as differentially expressed between pCR versus residual disease, at a false discovery rate of 1%. We examined the performance of 780 distinct classifiers (set of genes + prediction algorithm) in full cross-validation. Many predictors performed equally well. A nominally best 30-probe set Diagonal Linear Discriminant Analysis classifier was selected for independent validation. It showed significantly higher sensitivity (92% v 61%) than a clinical predictor including age, grade, and estrogen receptor status. The negative predictive value (96% v 86%) and area under the curve (0.877 v 0.811) were nominally better but not statistically significant. The combination of genomic and clinical information yielded a predictor not significantly different from the genomic predictor alone. In 31 samples, RNA was hybridized in replicate with resulting predictions that were 97% concordant. CONCLUSION: A 30-probe set pharmacogenomic predictor predicted pCR to T/FAC chemotherapy with high sensitivity and negative predictive value. This test correctly identified all but one of the patients who achieved pCR (12 of 13 patients) and all but one of those who were predicted to have residual disease had residual cancer (27 of 28 patients). Huang, E. H., E. A. Strom, et al. (2006). "Comparison of risk of local-regional recurrence after mastectomy or breast conservation therapy for patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy and radiation stratified according to a prognostic index score." Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 66(2): 352-7. PURPOSE: We previously developed a prognostic index that stratified patients treated with breast conservation therapy (BCT) after neoadjuvant chemotherapy into groups with different risks for local-regional recurrence (LRR). The purpose of this study was to compare the rates of LRR as a function of prognostic index score for patients treated with BCT or mastectomy plus radiation after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed 815 patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation. Patients were assigned an index score from 0 to 4 and given 1 point for the presence of each factor: clinical N2 to N3 disease, lymphovascular invasion, pathologic size>2 cm, and multifocal residual disease. RESULTS: The 10-year LRR rates were very low and similar between the mastectomy and BCT groups for patients with an index score of 0 or 1. For patients with a score of 2, LRR trended lower for those treated with mastectomy vs. BCT (12% vs. 28%, p=0.28). For patients with a score of 3 to 4, LRR was significantly lower for those treated with mastectomy vs. BCT (19% vs. 61%, p=0.009). 17 CONCLUSIONS: This analysis suggests that BCT can provide excellent local-regional treatment for the vast majority of patients after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. For the few patients with a score of 3 to 4, LRR was >60% after BCT and was <20% with mastectomy. If these findings are confirmed in larger randomized studies, the prognostic index may be useful in helping to select the type of surgical treatment for patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation. Intra, M., G. Trifiro, et al. (2005). "Second biopsy of axillary sentinel lymph node for reappearing breast cancer after previous sentinel lymph node biopsy." Ann Surg Oncol 12(11): 895-9. BACKGROUND: Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is a safe and accurate axillary staging procedure for patients with primary operable breast cancer. An increasing proportion of these patients undergo breastconserving surgery, and 5% to 15% will develop local relapses that necessitate reoperation. Although a previous SLNB is often considered a contraindication for a subsequent SLNB, few data support this concern. METHODS: Between January 2000 and June 2004, 79 patients who were previously treated at our institution with breast-conserving surgery and who had a negative SLNB for early breast cancer developed, during follow-up, local recurrence that was amenable to reoperation. Eighteen of these patients were offered a second SLNB because of a clinically negative axillary status an average of 26.1 months after the primary event. RESULTS: In all 18 patients (7 with ductal carcinoma-in-situ and 11 with invasive recurrences), preoperative lymphoscintigraphy showed an axillary sentinel lymph node, with a preoperative identification rate of 100%, and 1 or more SLNs (an average of 1.3 per patient) were surgically removed. Sentinel lymph node metastases were detected in two patients with invasive recurrence, and a complete axillary dissection followed. At a median follow up of 12.7 months, no axillary recurrences have occurred in patients who did not undergo axillary dissection. CONCLUSIONS: Second SLNB after previous SLNB is technically feasible and likely effective in selected breast cancer patients. A larger population and longer follow-up are necessary to confirm these preliminary data. Jackson, B. M., S. Kim, et al. (2006). "Repeat operative sentinel lymph node biopsy." Clin Breast Cancer 6(6): 530-2. Because sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy continues to be used for staging in patients with breast cancer, physicians treating these patients will be faced with in-breast recurrences and new primary breast cancers in the treated breast. Repeat operative SLN biopsy might be feasible in this clinical scenario. This report describes the case of a patient with an ipsilateral different-site, recurrent, infiltrating ductal carcinoma 14 months after lumpectomy; negative SLN biopsy result; and radiation therapy, now with a positive SLN biopsy result. 18 Jeruss, J. S., D. J. Winchester, et al. (2005). "Axillary recurrence after sentinel node biopsy." Ann Surg Oncol 12(1): 34-40. BACKGROUND: Sentinel node biopsy (SNB) has evolved as the standard of care in the surgical staging of breast cancer. This technique is accurate for surgical staging of axillary nodal disease. We hypothesized that axillary recurrence after SNB is rare and that SNB may provide regional control in patients with microscopic nodal involvement. METHODS: With institutional review board approval, SNB was performed with peritumoral injection of 99mTc-labeled sulfur colloid. From 1996 to 2003, 1167 patients were entered into a prospective cancer database after surgical therapy; 916 patients consented to long-term follow-up. Fifty-two patients (5.7%) did not map successfully and were excluded, leading to a study population of 864 patients. The median follow-up was 27.4 months (range, 1-98 months). RESULTS: The median number of sentinel nodes harvested was 2, and 633 (73%) patients had negative sentinel nodes. Thirty (4.7%) of those sentinel node-negative patients underwent completion axillary dissection, whereas 592 (94%) patients were followed up with observation. A total of 231 (27%) had positive sentinel nodes: 158 (68%) of these patients underwent completion axillary dissection, and 73 (32%) were managed with observation alone. Two (.32%) patients who were sentinel node negative had an axillary recurrence; one of these patients had undergone completion axillary dissection. No patient in the observed sentinel nodepositive group had an axillary recurrence (odds ratio, .37; P = .725). CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of a median follow-up of 27.4 months, axillary recurrence after SNB is extraordinarily rare regardless of nodal involvement, thus indicating that this technique provides an accurate measure of axillary disease and may impart regional control for patients with node-positive disease. Johansen, H., S. Kaae, et al. (1990). "Simple mastectomy with postoperative irradiation versus extended radical mastectomy in breast cancer. A twenty-fiveyear follow-up of a randomized trial." Acta Oncol 29(6): 709-15. From November 1951 to December 1957, all patients with untreated breast cancer admitted to the Radium Centre in Copenhagen were randomized before their operability was evaluated into two groups, if the patients were operable, viz. simple mastectomy with postoperative x-ray treatment or extended radical mastectomy. Twenty-five-year results are presented, showing no difference in survival or recurrence-free survival of the operable patients. Histological grading was performed in nearly all cases. Patients with grade 1 tumours had a better survival than grades 2 and 3, but there was no difference in survival between the two treatment groups, when histological grading was taken into account. Histological node positive patients had more grades 2 and 3, tumours, whereas node negative patients had more grade 1 than grades 2 and 3 tumours. Premenopausal women had a significantly better survival than postmenopausal in all stages. 19 Jones, J. L., K. Zabicki, et al. (2005). "A comparison of sentinel node biopsy before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy: timing is important." Am J Surg 190(4): 517-20. BACKGROUND: Because neoadjuvant chemotherapy is being used more frequently, the optimal timing of sentinel node biopsy (SNB) remains controversial. We previously evaluated the predictive value of SNB before neoadjuvant chemotherapy in clinically node-negative breast cancer. Our identification rate of the sentinel node among 52 patients before chemotherapy with a mean tumor size of 4 cm was 100%. In this study, we compared the identification rates of SNB before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy and evaluated the false-negative rate of SNB after chemotherapy. METHODS: A retrospective institutional database review identified 36 women who underwent SNB after neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer from 1999 to 2004. The initial clinical tumor size and lymph node status, SNB pathology, axillary lymph node dissection pathology, and residual pathologic tumor size were reviewed. RESULTS: Sixteen of 36 patients had a clinically negative axilla before neoadjuvant therapy. SNB after neoadjuvant therapy was successful in 29 patients (80.6%), although 7 patients did not map (19.4%). Six of the 7 patients who failed to map had a clinically positive axilla initially. Axillary disease was found in 6 of 7 of these patients at dissection (85.7%). Of the 29 patients who mapped successfully, 13 (45%) were SNB negative, and 16 (55%) were SNB positive. Of the 13 SNB-negative patients, 2 had a positive axillary lymph node dissection, yielding a false-negative rate of 11%. Thirteen patients who mapped had a clinically positive axilla before therapy (45%). Of the 11 patients with true-negative SNBs, 7 (64%) were clinically node negative at presentation. The initial tumor sizes on examination ranged from 2 to 9 cm (mean, 5.0 cm), and residual pathologic tumor sizes ranged from 0 to 6 cm (mean, 1.8 cm). Failure to map correlated with a clinically positive axilla at presentation (100% vs 45%) but did not correlate with initial tumor size. CONCLUSIONS: Sentinel node identification rates are significantly better when mapping is performed before neoadjuvant chemotherapy (100% vs 80.6%), with failure to map correlated with clinically positive nodal disease at presentation and residual disease at axillary lymph node dissection. Among patients who map successfully after chemotherapy, the falsenegative rate is high (11%). Given these findings, we currently recommend SNB before neoadjuvant chemotherapy for clinically nodenegative patients, and raise concerns about the use of SNB after neoadjuvant therapy in patients with an initially clinically positive axilla. Karalak, A. and P. Homcha-Em (1999). "Occult axillary lymph node metastases discovered by serial section in node-negative breast cancer." J Med Assoc Thai 82(10): 1017-9. Serial sectioning of the axillary lymph nodes from lymph node-negative 20 breast cancer patients is presented. All patients were admitted between 1997-1998 and underwent mastectomy and axillary node dissection. The histological examination revealed micrometastases in 5 (10%) of 50 breast cancer subjects. The detection of these micrometastases in lymph nodes may identify a high-risk node-negative population. The time and money that was spent to detect the micrometastases was too high to perform it in every case. The clinician should be aware of the occult micrometastases in node-negative cases. Kaufmann, P., C. E. Dauphine, et al. (2006). "Success of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in conversion of mastectomy to breast conservation surgery." Am Surg 72(10): 935-8. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NC) in patients with breast cancer results in high response rates and has been used with the purpose of reducing tumor size and achieving breast conservation (BC) in individuals who initially require mastectomy. Our objective is to determine the success of NC in achieving BC in women who initially were not candidates for BC. We conducted a cohort study of women with invasive breast cancer who required mastectomy but desired BC surgery. Outcomes measured were tumor response and rates of BC. Thirty-seven women had a mean age of 45 years. Mean tumor size was 51 mm, and 62 per cent were larger than 4 cm. Tumors were predominantly infiltrating ductal carcinoma (83.3%) and high grade (62.2%). Cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and 5fluorouracil with or without taxotere were most commonly used (86%). Complete clinical and pathologic responses were seen in 32.4 per cent and 10.8 per cent of patients, respectively. BC was achieved in 56.7 per cent of cases. Only initial tumor size predicted tumor regression and success of BC (P = 0.014). Neither tumor histology nor biologic markers predicted tumor response. In conclusion, NC is an effective alternative in achieving tumor reduction and BC in selected patients who require mastectomy but desire BC surgery. Khan, A., M. S. Sabel, et al. (2005). "Comprehensive axillary evaluation in neoadjuvant chemotherapy patients with ultrasonography and sentinel lymph node biopsy." Ann Surg Oncol 12(9): 697-704. BACKGROUND: There is ongoing debate regarding the optimal sequence of sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy and neoadjuvant chemotherapy (CTX) for breast cancer. We report the accuracy of comprehensive preneoadjuvant CTX and post-neoadjuvant CTX axillary staging via ultrasound imaging, fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy, and SLN biopsy. METHODS: From 2001 to 2004, 91 neoadjuvant CTX patients at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center underwent axillary staging by ultrasonography, ultrasound-guided FNA biopsy, SLN biopsy, or a combination of these. RESULTS: Axillary staging was pathologically negative by pre-neoadjuvant CTX SLN biopsy in 53 cases (58%); these patients had no further axillary surgery. In 38 cases (42%), axillary 21 metastases were confirmed at presentation by either ultrasound-guided FNA or SLN biopsy. These 38 patients underwent completion axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) after delivery of neoadjuvant CTX. Followup lymphatic mapping was attempted in 33 of these cases, and the SLN was identified in 32 (identification rate, 97%). One third of these cases were completely node negative on ALND. Residual metastatic disease was identified in 22 cases, and the SLN was falsely negative in 1 (4.5%). CONCLUSIONS: Patients receiving neoadjuvant CTX can have accurate axillary nodal staging by ultrasound-guided FNA or SLN biopsy. In cases of documented axillary metastasis at presentation, repeat axillary staging with SLN biopsy can document the post-neoadjuvant CTX nodal status. This strategy optimizes pre-neoadjuvant CTX and post-neoadjuvant CTX staging information by distinguishing the patients who are node negative at presentation from those who have been downstaged to node negativity and offers the potential for avoiding unnecessary ALNDs in both of these patient subsets. Kinoshita, T., M. Takasugi, et al. (2006). "Sentinel lymph node biopsy examination for breast cancer patients with clinically negative axillary lymph nodes after neoadjuvant chemotherapy." Am J Surg 191(2): 225-9. BACKGROUND: The feasibility and accuracy of sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy examination for breast cancer patients with clinically nodenegative breast cancer after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) have been investigated under the administration of a radiocolloid imaging agent injected intradermally over a tumor. In addition, conditions that may affect SLN biopsy detection and false-negative rates with respect to clinical tumor response and clinical nodal status before NAC were analyzed. METHODS: Seventy-seven patients with stages II and III breast cancer previously treated with NAC were enrolled in the study. All patients were clinically node negative after NAC. The patients then underwent SLN biopsy examination, which involved a combination of intradermal injection over the tumor of radiocolloid and a subareolar injection of blue dye. This was followed by standard level I/II axillary lymph node dissection. RESULTS: The SLN could be identified in 72 of 77 patients (identification rate, 93.5%). In 69 of 72 patients (95.8%) the SLN accurately predicted the axillary status. Three patients had a false-negative SLN biopsy examination result, resulting in a false-negative rate of 11.1% (3 of 27). The SLN identification rate tended to be higher, although not statistically significantly, among patients who had clinically negative axillary lymph nodes before NAC (97.6%; 41 of 42). This is in comparison with patients who had a positive axillary lymph node before NAC (88.6%; 31 of 35). CONCLUSIONS: The SLN identification rate and false-negative rate were similar to those in nonneoadjuvant studies. The SLN biopsy examination accurately predicted metastatic disease in the axilla of patients with tumor response after NAC and clinical nodal status before NAC. This diagnostic technique, using an intradermal injection of radiocolloid, may provide 22 treatment guidance for patients after NAC. Kuerer, H. M., A. A. Sahin, et al. (1999). "Incidence and impact of documented eradication of breast cancer axillary lymph node metastases before surgery in patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy." Ann Surg 230(1): 72-8. OBJECTIVE: To determine the incidence and prognostic significance of documented eradication of breast cancer axillary lymph node (ALN) metastases after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is the standard of care for patients with locally advanced breast cancer and is being evaluated in patients with earlier-stage operable disease. METHODS: One hundred ninety-one patients with locally advanced breast cancer and cytologically documented ALN metastases were treated in two prospective trials of doxorubicinbased neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Patients had breast surgery with level I and II axillary dissection followed by additional chemotherapy and radiation treatment. Nodal sections from 43 patients who were originally identified as having negative ALNs at surgery were reevaluated and histologically confirmed to be without metastases. An additional 1112 sections from these lymph node blocks were obtained; half were stained with an anticytokeratin antibody cocktail and analyzed. Survival was calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method. RESULTS: Of 191 patients with positive ALNs at diagnosis, 23% (43 patients) were converted to a negative axillary nodal status on histologic examination (median number of nodes removed = 16). Of the 43 patients with complete axillary conversion, 26% (n = 11) had N1 disease and 74% (n = 32) had N2 disease. On univariate analysis, patients with complete versus incomplete histologic axillary conversion were more likely to have initial estrogenreceptor-negative tumors, smaller primary tumors, and a complete pathologic response in the primary tumor. The 5-year disease-free survival rates were 87% in patients with preoperative eradication of axillary metastases and 51% for patients with residual nodal disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Of the 39 patients with complete histologic conversion for whom nodal blocks were available, occult nodal metastases were found in additional nodal sections in 4 patients (10%). At a median follow-up of 61 months, the 5- year disease-free survival rates were 87% in patients without occult nodal metastases and 75% in patients with occult nodal metastases. CONCLUSIONS: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy can completely clear the axilla of microscopic disease before surgery, and occult metastases are found in only 10% of patients with a histologically negative axilla. The results of this study have implications for the potential use of sentinel lymph node biopsy as an alternative to axillary dissection in patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Langer, I., W. R. Marti, et al. (2005). "Axillary recurrence rate in breast cancer patients with negative sentinel lymph node (SLN) or SLN micrometastases: 23 prospective analysis of 150 patients after SLN biopsy." Ann Surg 241(1): 152-8. OBJECTIVE: To assess the axillary recurrence rate in breast cancer patients with negative sentinel lymph node (SLN) or SLN micrometastases (>0.2 mm to <or=2.0 mm) after breast surgery and SLN procedure without formal axillary lymph node dissection (ALND). SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Under controlled study conditions, the SLN procedure proved to be a reliable method for the evaluation of the axillary nodal status in patients with early-stage invasive breast cancer. Axillary dissection of levels I and II can thus be omitted if the SLN is free of macrometastases. The prognostic value and potential therapeutic consequences of SLN micrometastases, however, remain a matter of great debate. We present the follow-up data of our prospective SLN study, particularly focusing on the axillary recurrence rate in patients with negative SLN and SLN micrometastases. METHODS: In this prospective study, 236 SLN procedures were performed in 234 patients with earlystage breast cancer between April 1998 and September 2002. The SLN were marked and identified with 99m technetium-labeled colloid and blue dye (Isosulfanblue 1%). The excised SLNs were examined by step sectioning and stained with hematoxylin and eosin and immunohistochemistry (cytokeratin antibodies Lu-5 or CK 22). Only patients with SLN macrometastases received formal ALND of levels I and II, while patients with negative SLN or SLN micrometastases did not undergo further axillary surgery. RESULTS: The SLN identification rate was 95% (224/236). SLN macrometastases were found in 33% (74/224) and micrometastases (>0.2 mm to <or=2 mm) in 12% (27/224) of patients. Adjuvant therapy did not differ between the group of SLN-negative patients and those with SLN micrometastases. After a median follow-up of 42 months (range 12-64 months), 99% (222/224) of evaluable patients were reassessed. While 1 patient with a negative SLN developed axillary recurrence (0.7%, 1/122), all 27 patients with SLN micrometastases were disease-free at the last follow-up control. CONCLUSIONS: Axillary recurrences in patients with negative SLN or SLN micrometastases did not occur more frequently after SLN biopsy alone compared with results from the recent literature regarding breast cancer patients undergoing formal ALND. Based on a median follow-up of 42 months-one of the longest so far in the literature-the present investigation does not provide evidence that the presence of SLN micrometastases leads to axillary recurrence or distant disease and supports the theory that formal ALND may be omitted in these patients. Le Bouedec, G., B. Geissler, et al. (2006). "[Sentinel lymph node biopsy for breast cancer after neoadjuvant chemotherapy: influence of nodal status before treatment]." Bull Cancer 93(4): 415-9. OBJECTIVES: To determine feasibility and accuracy of SLN biopsy in locally advanced breast cancer treated by neoadjuvant chemotherapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: From April 2001 to December 2004, a 24 prospective series was constituted of 74 women with invasive breast carcinoma T1T2T3N0N1 receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The SLN located was removed using subdermal periareolar injection of radiolabelled nanocolloid and axillary lymph node dissection was systematically performed. RESULTS: A SLN was identified in 68/74 (92%) patients. It was metastatic in 30/68 cases (44%). The false negative (FN) rate was 14% (5/35). In the subgroup of 42 patients clinically N(0) before chemotherapy, accuracy was 100 %, and FN rate 0%, in the 32 N1, accuracy was 83%, and FN rate 25%. CONCLUSIONS: SLN biopsy using a single subdermal injection of radiolabelled nanocolloid in patients with a breast cancer treated by neoadjuvant chemotherapy is technically feasible and appears to be highly accurate in the subgroup of patients with a clinically negative axilla breast cancer before treatment. Lee, Y. J., P. Doliny, et al. (2004). "Docetaxel and cisplatin as primary chemotherapy for treatment of locally advanced breast cancers." Clin Breast Cancer 5(5): 371-6. A phase II trial was designed to evaluate the effectiveness of docetaxel/cisplatin as primary or neoadjuvant chemotherapy of locally advanced breast carcinoma (LABC). Patients with newly diagnosed breast cancers > or = 5 cm in size by palpation were treated with docetaxel/cisplatin, both at 70 mg/m2 intravenously every 21 days for 4 courses. Upon completion of chemotherapy, all patients underwent modified radical mastectomy with axillary nodal dissection. Pathologic complete response (pCR) was defined as absence of any invasive carcinoma in the breast. Standard AC (doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide) at 60 mg/m2 and 600 mg/m2, respectively, for 4 cycles was given as adjuvant therapy to maximally eradicate occult distant disease. Between March 1998 and October 2001, 57 women were entered onto this trial, 28 (49%) with inoperable T4 and inflammatory cancers. Pretreatment median tumor size was 9 cm. Thirty-six patients (63%) had estrogen receptorpositive tumors and 10 patients (18%) had tumors with HER2 overexpression. All tumors became operable after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Pathologic complete response in the breast was achieved in 15 patients (26%) and pCR in the breast and the axilla was achieved in 11 patients (20%). All neoadjuvant chemotherapy courses were administered at full doses without treatment delays caused by toxicity. The most common side effects were hyperglycemia, anemia, and mild neuropathy. The results of this study suggest that the docetaxel/cisplatin combination can be an effective and well-tolerated induction treatment of LABC, even in very large mostly HER2-nonoverexpressing tumors. Loibl, S., G. von Minckwitz, et al. (2006). "Surgical Procedures After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Operable Breast Cancer: Results of the GEPARDUO Trial." Ann Surg Oncol. BACKGROUND: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy can increase the rate of 25 breast-conserving surgery in patients with operable breast cancer. However, uncertainty remains regarding surgical procedures and predictors for successful breast-conserving surgery. METHODS: This study was an analysis of surgical data of a representative data subset of 607 patients enrolled in the GEPARDUO study. This prospective, multicenter, phase III study randomly assigned patients with operable breast cancer (>/= 2 cm) to neoadjuvant 8-week dose-dense doxorubicin plus docetaxel or a 24-week schedule of doxorubicin plus cyclophosphamide followed by docetaxel (AC-DOC). RESULTS: Breast conservation was attempted in 493 (81.2%) patients, but 43 patients eventually required mastectomy, thus resulting in a breast-conserving surgery rate of 74.1%. Breast-conserving re-excision was performed in 61 patients (12.4%). Factors associated with a significantly higher breastconserving surgery rate were a prechemotherapy tumor size </= 40 mm, nonlobular histological characteristics, treatment with AC-DOC, clinical response, postchemotherapy tumor size </= 20 mm, and treatment in a larger center (>10 enrolled patients). Nonlobular histological characteristics and intraoperative frozen-section analysis for margin evaluation were associated with significantly lower reoperation rates (P = .015). CONCLUSIONS: Breast conservation after neoadjuvant chemotherapy is feasible in most patients with operable breast cancer. For surgical planning, tumor characteristics and response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy should be taken into account. Improved breast-imaging modalities are necessary to improve detection of residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, especially when breast cancer is of lobular invasive histology. Margin assessment by intraoperative frozen-section analysis is helpful to avoid reoperation. To achieve an optimal result, an interdisciplinary surgical approach is important. Louis-Sylvestre, C., K. Clough, et al. (2004). "Axillary treatment in conservative management of operable breast cancer: dissection or radiotherapy? Results of a randomized study with 15 years of follow-up." J Clin Oncol 22(1): 97-101. PURPOSE: Axillary dissection is the standard management of the axilla in invasive breast carcinoma. This surgery is responsible for functional sequelae and some options are considered, including axillary radiotherapy. In 1992, we published the initial results of a prospective randomized trial comparing lumpectomy plus axillary radiotherapy versus lumpectomy plus axillary dissection. We present an update of this study with a median follow-up of 180 months (range, 12 to 221 months). PATIENTS AND METHODS: Between 1982 and 1987, 658 patients with a breast carcinoma less than 3 cm in diameter and clinically uninvolved lymph nodes were randomly assigned to axillary dissection or axillary radiotherapy. All patients underwent wide excision of the tumor and breast irradiation. RESULTS: The two groups were similar for age, tumor-nodemetastasis system stage, and presence of hormonal receptors; 21% of the patients in the axillary dissection group were node-positive. Our initial 26 results showed an increased survival rate in the axillary dissection group at 5 years (P =.009). At 10 and 15 years, however, survival rates were identical in both groups (73.8% v 75.5% at 15 years). Recurrences in the axillary node were less frequent in the axillary dissection group at 15 years (1% v 3%; P =.04). There was no difference in recurrence rates in the breast or supraclavicular and distant metastases between the two groups. CONCLUSION: In early breast cancers with clinically uninvolved lymph nodes, our findings show that long-term survival does not differ after axillary radiotherapy and axillary dissection. The only difference is a better axillary control in the group with axillary dissection. Low, J. A., A. W. Berman, et al. (2004). "Long-term follow-up for locally advanced and inflammatory breast cancer patients treated with multimodality therapy." J Clin Oncol 22(20): 4067-74. PURPOSE: To determine long-term event-free (EFS) and overall survival (OS) for patients with stage III breast cancer treated with combinedmodality therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Between 1980 and 1988, 107 patients with stage III breast cancer were prospectively enrolled for study at the National Cancer Institute and stratified by whether or not they had features of inflammatory breast cancer (IBC). Patients were treated to best response with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, methotrexate, fluorouracil, leucovorin, and hormonal synchronization with conjugated estrogens and tamoxifen. Patients with pathologic complete response received definitive radiotherapy to the breast and axilla, whereas patients with residual disease underwent mastectomy, lymph node dissection, and radiotherapy. All patients underwent six additional cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy. RESULTS: OS and EFS were obtained with a median live patient follow-up time of 16.8 years. The 46 IBC patients had a median OS of 3.8 years and EFS of 2.3 years, compared with 12.2 and 9.0 years, respectively, in stage IIIA breast cancer patients. Fifteen-year OS survival was 20% for IBC versus 50% for stage IIIA patients and 23% for stage IIIB non-IBC. Pathologic response was not associated with improved survival for stage IIIA or IBC patients. Presence of dermal lymphatic invasion did not change the probability of survival in clinical IBC patients. CONCLUSION: Fifteen-year follow-up of stage IIIA and inflammatory breast cancer is rarely reported; IBC patients have a poor long-term outlook. Lymberis, S. C., P. K. Parhar, et al. (2004). "Pharmacogenomics and breast cancer." Pharmacogenomics 5(1): 31-55. Germline variants can be used to study breast cancer susceptibility as well as the variable response to both drug and radiation therapy used in the treatment of breast cancer. In addition to germline high-penetrance mutations important in familial and hereditary breast cancer, a substantial component of breast cancer risk can be attributed to the combined effect of many low-risk germline polymorphisms involved in relevant pathways 27 like those of DNA repair, adhesion, carcinogen and estrogen metabolism. Additionally, the identification of sequence variants in genes involved in response to chemotherapy and radiation treatment, has created the opportunity to apply genomics to individualized treatment. The continued insight into the molecular pathways involved in drug and radiation response has enabled progress in tailoring therapies in such a way as to both maximize efficacy and minimize toxicity. Polymorphisms in genes encoding drug-metabolizing enzymes, drug transporters and drug targets can be used to predict toxicity and response to pharmacologic agents used in breast cancer treatment. Similarly, germline variants in genes involved in DNA repair, radiation-induced fibrosis and reactive oxygen species may be used to predict response to radiation therapy. As a result, pharmacogenomics is rapidly evolving to affect the entire spectrum of breast cancer management, influencing both prevention and treatment choices. Mamounas, E. P., A. Brown, et al. (2005). "Sentinel node biopsy after neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer: results from National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project Protocol B-27." J Clin Oncol 23(12): 2694702. PURPOSE: Experience with sentinel node biopsy (SNB) after neoadjuvant chemotherapy is limited. We examined the feasibility and accuracy of this procedure within a randomized trial in patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: During the conduct of National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project trial B-27, several participating surgeons attempted SNB before the required axillary dissection in 428 patients. All underwent lymphatic mapping and an attempt to identify and remove a sentinel node. Lymphatic mapping was performed with radioactive colloid (14.7%), with lymphazurin blue dye alone (29.9%), or with both (54.7%). RESULTS: Success rate for the identification and removal of a sentinel node was 84.8%. Success rate increased significantly with the use of radioisotope (87.6% to 88.9%) versus with the use of lymphazurin alone (78.1%, P = .03). There were no significant differences in success rate according to clinical tumor size, clinical nodal status, age, or calendar year of random assignment. Of 343 patients who had SNB and axillary dissection, the sentinel nodes were positive in 125 patients and were the only positive nodes in 70 patients (56.0%). Of the 218 patients with negative sentinel nodes, nonsentinel nodes were positive in 15 (false-negative rate, 10.7%; 15 of 140 patients). There were no significant differences in false-negative rate according to clinical patient and tumor characteristics, method of lymphatic mapping, or breast tumor response to chemotherapy. CONCLUSION: These results are comparable to those obtained from multicenter studies evaluating SNB before systemic therapy and suggest that the sentinel node concept is applicable following neoadjuvant chemotherapy. 28 Martelli, G., P. Boracchi, et al. (2005). "A randomized trial comparing axillary dissection to no axillary dissection in older patients with T1N0 breast cancer: results after 5 years of follow-up." Ann Surg 242(1): 1-6; discussion 7-9. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Axillary dissection, an invasive procedure that may adversely affect quality of life, used to obtain prognostic information in breast cancer, is being supplanted by sentinel node biopsy. In older women with early breast cancer and no palpable axillary nodes, it may be safe to give no axillary treatment. We addressed this issue in a randomized trial comparing axillary dissection with no axillary dissection in older patients with T1N0 breast cancer. METHODS: From 1996 to 2000, 219 women, 65 to 80 years of age, with early breast cancer and clinically negative axillary nodes were randomized to conservative breast surgery with or without axillary dissection. Tamoxifen was prescribed to all patients for 5 years. The primary endpoints were axillary events in the no axillary dissection arm, comparison of overall mortality (by log rank test), breast cancer mortality, and breast events (by Gray test). RESULTS: Considering a follow-up of 60 months, there were no significant differences in overall or breast cancer mortality, or crude cumulative incidence of breast events, between the 2 groups. Only 2 patients in the no axillary dissection arm (8 and 40 months after surgery) developed overt axillary involvement during follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Older patients with T1N0 breast cancer can be treated by conservative breast surgery and no axillary dissection without adversely affecting breast cancer mortality or overall survival. The very low cumulative incidence of axillary events suggests that even sentinel node biopsy is unnecessary in these patients. Axillary dissection should be reserved for the small proportion of patients who later develop overt axillary disease. Milardovic, R., I. Castellon, et al. (2006). "Scintigraphic visualization of an epigastric sentinel node in recurrent breast cancer after lumpectomy and postoperative radiation therapy." Clin Nucl Med 31(4): 207-8. Sentinel node imaging and biopsy have become standard procedures for staging early breast cancer. Positive sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy necessitates the need for axillary lymph node dissection (ALND). Failure to visualize a sentinel lymph node in recurrent breast cancer after treatment by surgery, chemotherapy, and high-dose postoperative radiation therapy is almost the case in every patient. The reason for failure to visualize the sentinel node is the fibrosis that follows high-dose radiotherapy and blocks the lymphatics preventing spread of the tumor cells to the lymph nodes. Alternative pathways for the drainage of lymph from the breast are developed in these patients. We have previously reported on the alternative pathways of lymphatics to the contralateral axilla, supraclavicular area, and also reported on the development of intramammary lymph nodes. In this report, we are presenting another alternative pathway of lymphatics to the region of the epigastrium below the lower end of the sternum. 29 Neuman, H., L. A. Carey, et al. (2006). "Axillary lymph node count is lower after neoadjuvant chemotherapy." Am J Surg 191(6): 827-9. BACKGROUND: Retrieval of fewer than 10 lymph nodes at axillary dissection (ALND) for breast cancer can represent anatomic variation or inadequate dissection. We postulated that despite aggressive ALND, a lower lymph node count is more frequent after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. METHODS: Patients who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by ALND were compared with patients who received surgery first. All patients received a level I and II ALND at a single institution by one of the breast surgeons. The number of nodes retrieved at ALND was dichotomized into categories (< 10 and > or = 10), and compared using Fisher exact test. RESULTS: A total of 143 neoadjuvant and 170 surgery-first patients were studied. Patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy were significantly more likely to have fewer than 10 lymph nodes retrieved at ALND than were the surgery-first patients (19/143 or 13% vs. 6/170 or 4%, P = .003). CONCLUSIONS: A low lymph node count is more common in patients after treatment with neoadjuvant chemotherapy and should not be assumed to represent an incomplete ALND. Newman, E. A., V. M. Cimmino, et al. (2006). "Lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node biopsy for patients with local recurrence after breast-conservation therapy." Ann Surg Oncol 13(1): 52-7. BACKGROUND: Local recurrence (LR) after breast-conservation therapy for breast cancer occurs in 10% to 15% of cases. A subset of these represents biologically aggressive disease, yet prognostic features for identifying this high-risk category are lacking. We hypothesized that lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node biopsy would provide useful information regarding dominant lymphatic drainage patterns of patients with LR. METHODS: Breast cancer case records involving surgery for LR at the University of Michigan from 2002 to 2004 were reviewed. The lymphatic drainage patterns were compared with those of 117 patients who underwent mapping for primary breast cancer. RESULTS: Fourteen LR cases were identified (10 with initial axillary lymph node dissection, 2 with initial sentinel lymph nodes, and 2 with no axillary surgery at the time of primary cancer treatment); lymphatic mapping was performed in 10. The sentinel lymph node identification rate was 90%, the median number of lymph nodes retrieved was 3, and no metastases were detected. Significantly more cases of nonipsilateral axillary sentinel node drainage were observed in mapping procedures performed for LR compared with those for primary breast cancer (67% vs. 15%; P = .001). CONCLUSIONS: Lymphatic mapping is feasible in patients undergoing mastectomy for LR and is likely to identify aberrantly located sentinel lymph nodes that would otherwise be overlooked with a conventional completion mastectomy. 30 Reitsamer, R., F. Peintinger, et al. (2003). "Sentinel lymph node biopsy in breast cancer patients after neoadjuvant chemotherapy." J Surg Oncol 84(2): 63-7. BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is an accurate method for axillary staging in patients with early breast cancer. The aim of this study was to evaluate the accuracy and the feasibility of SLNB in breast cancer patients who had received preoperative (neoadjuvant) chemotherapy. METHODS: Patients with advanced breast cancer stage II or III who were treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy were included in the study. Sentinel lymph node (SLN) identification and biopsy was attempted and performed, and axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) was performed in the same surgical procedure after SLNB. The histopathologic examination of the SLNs and the dissected axillary lymph nodes was performed and nodal status was compared. RESULTS: Thirty patients were included in the study. After peritumoural injection of technetium-99m labelled human albumin and subareolar subcutaneous injection of blue dye, the SLNs could be identified in 26/30 patients (identification rate 86.7%). In 4/30 patients (13.3%) SLNs could not be identified. In 25/26 patients (96.2%) SLNs accurately predicted the axillary status. Eleven patients had negative SLNs and negative nodes in ALND. Six patients had positive SLNs and positive nodes in ALND. In eight patients SLNs only were positive and nodes in ALND were negative. One patient had a false-negative SLNB, calculating a false-negative rate of 6.7% (1/15). CONCLUSIONS: SLNB is a well introduced technique for axillary staging in patients with early breast cancer. The accuracy of SLNB after neoadjuvant chemotherapy is similar to patients with primary surgery. SLNB could be an alternative to ALND in a subgroup of patients after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and therefore could reduce morbidity due to surgery in those patients. Due to small numbers of patients, further evaluation in this subset of patients is required. Rouzier, R., M. C. Mathieu, et al. (2004). "Breast-conserving surgery after neoadjuvant anthracycline-based chemotherapy for large breast tumors." Cancer 101(5): 918-25. BACKGROUND: Randomized trials comparing neoadjuvant versus adjuvant chemotherapy show that primary chemotherapy allows more frequent breast-preserving surgery even though no survival advantage has been demonstrated. The aim of the current study was to determine the predicting factors and the survival impact of breast conservation in patients with large breast tumors treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. METHODS: Between January 1987 and December 2001, 594 patients with invasive T2-3 breast carcinoma who were ineligible for breastconserving surgery (the mean initial tumor diameter was 49 mm) were treated with 3 or 4 courses of an anthracycline-based primary chemotherapy, surgery, and radiotherapy. Various clinicopathologic factors were tested as possible predicting factors of breast-preserving 31 surgery. Survival analyses were performed to determine the implications of breast-conserving surgery on outcome. RESULTS: After primary chemotherapy, 287 (48%) patients were eligible for breast-conserving surgery and 307 patients underwent a mastectomy. Initial tumor diameter > 5 cm, low histologic grade, lobular histology, and multicentricity were independent predicting factors of breast conservation ineligibility in the multivariate analysis (logistic regression). In the univariate survival analysis, a failure of breast-preserving surgery was associated with a poor outcome. Local disease recurrence-free survival rates were similar in patients treated with lumpectomy and mastectomy. CONCLUSIONS: The results reported in the current study suggested that initial diameter, histologic type and grade, and multicentricity are potential prechemotherapy predicting factors of breast conservation. When carefully selected, patients treated with breast conservation had a risk of local disease recurrence similar to the risk of chest wall disease recurrence after mastectomy. Schwartz, G. (2005). "Neoadjuvant induction chemotherapy." Minerva Ginecol 57(3): 327-48. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) and neoadjuvant hormonal therapy (NAHT) have been adopted worldwide as appropriate, if not standard of care, options of treatment for patients with locally advanced carcinoma of the breast. The initial role of NACT was the conversion of so called inoperable tumors into those for which mastectomy could now be performed, irrespective of effect on overall survival outcome. As breast conservation became accepted as an alternative to mastectomy in selected patients, NACT often reduced tumor volume enough to allow consideration of this option for these patients as well. Currently a majority of patients undergoing NACT become candidates for breast conservation. Clinical trial data, however, suggest that overall survival has not been affected by NACT, although recent non randomized but prospective data do document improved disease free and overall survival, as well as decrease in local recurrence. The adoption of axillary lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) in stage I/II, clinically N0 patients has promoted the judicious use of SLNB in selected patients who have undergone NACT, if the nodes are ''downstaged'' and are clinically negative at the completion of NACT. SLNB in these patients remains highly controversial, as does the application of NACT in patients with smaller (T1, N1, or T2, N01) cancers. The optimal choice of drug regimens for NACT is also controversial, i.e., both the drugs used and the duration of treatment. Generally accepted approaches are usually the same as if the drugs were given as adjuvant, rather than neoadjuvant, treatment. Most investigators do agree that those patients who achieve a complete pathological response (pCR, or absence of any invasive cancer in the final specimen) to NACT do have an improved outcome, so that the manipulation of treatment regimens by ongoing clinical trials is of utmost 32 importance in this regard. The recent observation of an increased rate of pCR in patients with Herceptin added to the NACT regimen is, therefore, an exciting advance and requires further investigation. The adoption of NACT into treatment plans for women with earlier cancers is likely to become even more ubiquitous if a higher likelihood of pCR can be achieved, and as more and more women with smaller tumors (T1c) become almost automatic candidates for adjuvant chemotherapy because of tumor size, irrespective of node status. It is not difficult to imagine that the majority of women with breast cancer will become candidates for NACT as more information about tumor response and outcome data are accumulated. Taback, B., P. Nguyen, et al. (2006). "Sentinel lymph node biopsy for local recurrence of breast cancer after breast-conserving therapy." Ann Surg Oncol 13(8): 1099-104. BACKGROUND: Lymphatic mapping (LM) with sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy has revolutionized the surgical staging of primary breast cancer, but its utility and feasibility have not been established in patients with ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR) after breast-conserving surgery (BCS) and radiation. METHODS: We reviewed our breast cancer database to identify all patients who underwent preoperative lymphoscintigraphy for IBTR and whose primary tumor had been managed by BCS, SLN biopsy and/or axillary node dissection, and adjuvant breast irradiation. RESULTS: Preoperative lymphoscintigraphy identified migration to the regional nodal drainage basins in 11 (73%) of 15 patients, as follows: 5 ipsilateral axillary, 1 supraclavicular, 2 internal mammary, 2 interpectoral, and 3 contralateral axillary. Two patients demonstrated drainage to two nodal basins. In four patients, no drainage was observed. Intraoperative LM with radioisotope plus blue dye identified at least 1 SLN in 11 of 14 patients, and histopathologic evaluation revealed metastasis in 3 patients (2 contralateral axillary and 1 ipsilateral axillary). During preoperative lymphoscintigraphy, the radiocolloid migration time tended to be longer and the drainage pathways more variable than those associated with primary tumors. CONCLUSIONS: LM/SLN biopsy can be successfully performed in patients with IBTR after prior BCS, axillary surgical staging, and adjuvant radiation. This approach illustrates variations in the lymphatic drainage of recurrent breast tumors and may permit the identification of regional metastasis not noted with conventional imaging techniques. van Rijk, M. C., O. E. Nieweg, et al. (2006). "Sentinel node biopsy before neoadjuvant chemotherapy spares breast cancer patients axillary lymph node dissection." Ann Surg Oncol 13(4): 475-9. BACKGROUND: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer patients is a valuable method to determine the efficacy of chemotherapy and potentially downsize the primary tumor, which facilitates breast-conserving therapy. 33 In 18 studies published about sentinel node biopsy after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the sentinel node was identified in on average 89%, and the false-negative rate was on average 10%. Because of these mediocre results, no author dares to omit axillary clearance just yet. In our institute, sentinel lymph node biopsy is performed before neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The aim of this study was to evaluate our experience with this approach. METHODS: Sentinel node biopsy was performed before neoadjuvant chemotherapy in 25 T2N0 patients by using lymphoscintigraphy, a gamma ray detection probe, and patent blue dye. Axillary lymph node dissection was performed after chemotherapy if the sentinel node contained metastases. RESULTS: Ten patients had a tumor-positive axillary sentinel node, and one patient had an involved lateral intramammary node. Four patients had additional involved nodes in the completion lymph node dissection specimen. The other 14 patients (56%) had a tumor-negative sentinel node and did not undergo axillary lymph node dissection. No recurrences have been observed after a median follow-up of 18 months. CONCLUSIONS: Fourteen (56%) of the 25 patients were spared axillary lymph node dissection when the sentinel node was found to be disease free. Performing sentinel node biopsy before neoadjuvant chemotherapy seems successful and reliable in patients with T2N0 breast cancer. Villa, G., M. Gipponi, et al. (2000). "Localization of the sentinel lymph node in breast cancer by combined lymphoscintigraphy, blue dye and intraoperative gamma probe." Tumori 86(4): 297-9. Axillary lymph node status represents the most important prognostic factor in patients with operable breast cancer. A severe limitation of this technique is the relatively high rate of false negative sentinel lymph nodes (>5%). We studied 284 patients suffering from breast cancer; 264 had T1 tumors (16 T1a, 37 T1b and 211 T1c), while 20 had T2 tumors. All patients underwent lymphoscintigraphy 18-h before surgery. At surgery, 0.5 mL of patent blue violet was injected subdermally, and the sentinel lymph node (SN) was searched by gamma probe and by the dye method. The surgically isolated SN was processed for intraoperative and delayed examinations. The SN was successfully identified by the combined radioisotopic procedure and patent blue dye technique in 278/284 cases (97.9%). Analysis of the predictive value of the SN in relation to the status of the axillary lymph nodes was limited to 191 patients undergoing standard axillary dissection irrespective of the SN status. Overall, 63/191 (33%) identified SNs were metastatic, the SN alone being involved in 37/63 (58.7%) patients; a positive axillary status with negative SN was found in 10/73 (13.7%) patients with metastatic involvement. In T1a-T1b patients the SN turned out to be metastatic in 9/53 patients (17.0%). In 7/9 patients the SN was the only site of metastasis, while in 2/9 patients other axillary lymph nodes were found to be metastatic in addition to the SN. None of the 44 patients in whom the SN proved to be non-metastatic 34 showed any metastatic involvement of other axillary lymph nodes. Our results demonstrate a good predictive value of SN biopsy in patients with breast cancer; the predictive value was excellent in those subjects with nodules smaller than 1 cm. Viswambharan, J. K., D. Kadambari, et al. (2005). "Feasibility of breast conservation surgery in locally advanced breast cancer downstaged by neoadjuvant chemotherapy: a study in mastectomy specimens using simulation lumpectomy." Indian J Cancer 42(1): 30-4. BACKGROUND: The response of locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) to neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) offers these patients previously treated by mastectomy, the chance for breast conservation. AIM: This study aims to assess the feasibility of lumpectomy in patients with LABC treated by NACT, with residual tumor < or =5 cm. SETTINGS, DESIGN: Single group prospective study from August 2001 to June 2003 in a teaching hospital. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Thirty patients with LABC whose tumors reduced with NACT to 5 cm were included. Simulation lumpectomy was performed on the mastectomy specimens to achieve 1 to 2 cm clearance from tumor and hence margin negativity. Multiple sections of the inked margin were studied. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Margin positivity was correlated with patient factors. Chi square test and Fisher's exact test used as appropriate. P value 0.05 was considered significant. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: After three cycles of NACT, 4 patients (13%) had complete clinical response including 2 with complete pathological response. Twenty-two (73%) showed partial response and 4, no response. Fourteen out of thirty (47%) had tumor involvement of margins. Tumors with post-chemotherapy size> 4 cm were margin positive in 10/13 (77%). Tumors with post-chemotherapy size>3 cm were margin positive in 13/24 (54%). Tumors with post-chemotherapy size 3 cm were margin negative in 5/6 (83%). Pre-chemotherapy tumor size and post-chemotherapy tumor size were significantly associated with margin positivity (P=0.003). Tumors in the subareolar location had significantly higher incidence of residual tumor in the nipple areola complex. (P=0.04). Margin positivity of lumpectomy on downstaged tumors can be reduced by removing the nipple areola complex in subareolar tumors and by limiting breast conservation to tumors with postchemotherapy size < or =3 cm. White, E. J. (2001). "Early" Breast Cancer: Axillary Controversies. Unpublished: 12. Wolmark, N., J. Wang, et al. (2001). "Preoperative chemotherapy in patients with operable breast cancer: nine-year results from National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project B-18." J Natl Cancer Inst Monogr(30): 96-102. National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP) Protocol B18 was initiated in 1988 to determine whether four cycles of 35 doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide given preoperatively improve survival and disease-free survival (DFS) when compared with the same chemotherapy given postoperatively. Secondary aims included the evaluation of preoperative chemotherapy in downstaging the primary breast tumor and involved axillary lymph nodes, the comparison of lumpectomy rates and rates of ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR) in the two treatment groups, and the assessment of the correlation between primary tumor response and outcome. Initially published findings were based on a followup of 5 years; this report updates results through 9 years of follow-up. There continue to be no statistically significant overall differences in survival or DFS between the two treatment groups. Survival at 9 years is 70% in the postoperative group and 69% in the preoperative group (P =.80). DFS is 53% in postoperative patients and 55% in preoperative patients (P =.50). A statistically significant correlation persists between primary tumor response and outcome, and this correlation has become statistically stronger with longer follow-up. Patients assigned to preoperative chemotherapy received notably more lumpectomies than postoperative patients, especially among patients with tumors greater than 5 cm at study entry. Although the rate of IBTR was slightly higher in the preoperative group (10.7% versus 7.6%), this difference was not statistically significant. Marginally statistically significant treatment-by-age interactions appear to be emerging for survival and DFS, suggesting that younger patients may benefit from preoperative therapy, whereas the reverse may be true for older patients. Wong, J. S., A. Recht, et al. (1997). "Treatment outcome after tangential radiation therapy without axillary dissection in patients with early-stage breast cancer and clinically negative axillary nodes." Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 39(4): 915-20. PURPOSE: To determine the risk of nodal failure in patients with earlystage invasive breast cancer with clinically negative axillary lymph nodes treated with two-field tangential breast irradiation alone, without axillary lymph node dissection or use of a third nodal field. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Between 1988 and 1993, 986 evaluable women with clinical Stage I or II invasive breast cancer were treated with breast- conserving surgery and radiation therapy. Of these, 92 patients with clinically negative nodes received tangential breast irradiation (median dose, 45 Gy) followed by a boost, without axillary dissection. The median age was 69 years (range, 49-87). Eighty-three percent had T1 tumors. Fifty-three patients received tamoxifen, 1 received chemotherapy, and 2 patients received both. Median follow-up time for the 79 survivors was 50 months (range, 15-96). Three patients (3%) have been lost to follow-up after 20-32 months. RESULTS: No isolated regional nodal failures were identified. Two patients developed recurrence in the breast only (one of whom had a single positive axillary node found pathologically after mastectomy). One patient developed simultaneous local and distant failures, and six patients 36 developed distant failures only. One patient developed a contralateral ductal carcinoma in situ, and two patients developed other cancers. CONCLUSION: Among a group of 92 patients with early-stage breast cancer (typically T1 and also typically elderly) treated with tangential breast irradiation alone without axillary dissection, with or without systemic therapy, there were no isolated axillary or supraclavicular regional failures. These results suggest that it is feasible to treat selected clinically nodenegative patients with tangential fields alone. Prospective studies of this approach are warranted. Zurrida, S., R. Orecchia, et al. (2002). "Axillary radiotherapy instead of axillary dissection: a randomized trial. Italian Oncological Senology Group." Ann Surg Oncol 9(2): 156-60. 37