Abstract

The sentinel lymph node procedure is still under evaluation for the management of cervical and endometrial carcinomas. The aim of our study was to determine the diagnostic accuracy of single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) for preoperative sentinel lymph node mapping in uterine cancers. Sixty-eight patients with cervical (n=42) or endometrial carcinoma (n=26) underwent preoperative lymphoscintigraphy for sentinel node mapping. Sentinel node detection rate with conventional planar imaging was similar to that of SPECT/CT (87.1 versus 91.8 %) in the whole cohort. However, SPECT/CT detected a higher number of sentinel nodes in more than one third of patients, affected by either cervical or endometrial carcinoma. The rate of non or insufficiently contributive procedures (lack of uptake or unilateral uptake) in endometrial carcinomas was 47 % with conventional planar imaging, and 30 % with SPECT/CT. Sensitivity of both procedures for the detection of metastatic nodes was 81.8 %, compared to 100 % for the intraoperative combined detection (gamma probe sonde and blue dye). The impact of SPECT/CT for the sentinel lymph node detection in cervical and endometrial carcinomas needs further evaluation. Nevertheless, SPECT/CT may provide additional information when conventional planar imaging detects only unilateral uptake, may improve identification of atypical localizations, and facilitate surgical approach.

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