Abstract

Aims To identify a group of women with small breast cancers of favourable histological grade for whom observation alone may be an acceptable approach for management of the axilla. Methods In a retrospective analysis the incidence of nodal metastases was examined in a group of 355 consecutive patients over 55 years of age who underwent mastectomy or breast conserving surgery. All patients had either grade I (<20 mm) or grade II (<15 mm) oestrogen receptor positive tumours without lymphovascular invasion (LVI). In a related study on 173 clinically node negative patients, the rate of axillary recurrence was assessed in patients with small (<10 mm), non-high grade (I and II), ER-positive invasive ductal carcinomas without LVI. Axillary surgery was either omitted (135 patients) or delayed (38 patients) at the time of wide local excision or mastectomy. Results The overall incidence of positive nodes in this good prognostic group of patients was 13% (95% confidence interval 9.5–16.5). When the analysis was confined to grade I (≤20 mm) and grade II (≤10 mm) the overall incidence of nodal metastases was 10%. Rates of axillary recurrence at a median follow up of 49 months were only 1% when axillary surgery was omitted according to patient choice/departmental policy with no cases of uncontrolled axillary recurrence. Conclusion The risk:benefit ratio for detection of node positive cases in a selected group of older patients does not justify any form of axillary procedure at the time of primary surgery.

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