Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate whether cancer invasion of the dermis could hamper drainage of the radiotracer in breast cancer patients who were undergoing a Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy (SLNB) procedure. Ten patients who presented with T1-T2 breast cancer with dermal invasion alone as confirmed by a punch biopsy of skin were evaluated. For the SLNB procedure, a lymphoscintigraphy was performed 2 hours after intratumoral administration of 2 mCi (74 MBq) of 99mTc nanocolloid. The sentinel lymph nodes (SLN) were evaluated for the presence of tumor cells by hematoxylin-eosin staining and, when negative, by immunocytochemistry using anti-cytokeratin antibody (CAM 5.2). No migration of radiotracer was found in three patients, and one patient had a false negative SLN, so altogether the technique failed in four patients (40%). Axillary nodes proved to be positive in seven patients (70%).The high rate of failure in the lymphatic mapping and the high proportion of axillary positivity suggest a causal relationship with the invasion of the dermis, with possible implications for the validity of the SLNB procedure.

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