Abstract

Over the past 2 decades, axillary surgical management for breast cancer patients has been reshaped after several practice-changing randomized clinical trials provided evidence to support the de-escalation of axillary surgery, specifically the omission of axillary lymph node dissection, for patients with positive axillary lymph nodes. One such practice-changing trial was the American College of Surgeons Oncology Group Z0011 trial, which showed that patients with clinical T1–2 breast tumors and limited nodal disease (1–2 positive sentinel lymph nodes) who underwent upfront breast-conserving therapy could be safely spared the morbidity of axillary lymph node dissection. American College of Surgeons Oncology Group Z0011 has been criticized as several important groups were excluded, such as patients who underwent a mastectomy, patients with >2 positive sentinel lymph nodes, or patients with imaging-detected lymph node metastases. These exclusions have led to unclear guidelines and very difficult management decisions for many patients with breast cancer who are just outside the Z0011 criteria. Several subsequent trials that investigated sentinel lymph node biopsy alone or sentinel lymph node biopsy plus axillary radiation versus axillary lymph node dissection enrolled patients with higher volumes of disease than American College of Surgeons Oncology Group Z0011, such as mastectomy patients or patients with >2 positive sentinel lymph nodes. The goal of this review is to describe the findings of these trials and to discuss the current best practices regarding axillary management in patients who are candidates for upfront surgery but were excluded from American College of Surgeons Oncology Group Z0011, with a particular focus on patients undergoing mastectomy, patients with >2 positive sentinel lymph nodes, patients with large or multifocal tumors, and patients with imaging-detected biopsy-proven lymph node metastases.

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