Abstract

We evaluated the eventual benefits from sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) in comparison with axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) using a combined radioisotope/dye technique versus dye alone in breast cancer patients. SLNB was performed in 501 breast cancer patients (250 patients with dye alone and 251 with combined technique). Patients were divided in three groups: (A) clinical stage T1,2N0 (SLNB followed by ALND only in cases with positive histology), (B) clinical stage T1,2N0 (SLNB followed by ALND), and (C): advanced clinical stage (SLNB immediately followed by ALND). The incidence of recurrences and surgery morbidity was comparatively evaluated. The overall successful identification rate in patients of groups A and B was 97.7% (95.3% with dye and 99.3% with dye and isotope, P = 0.04) and in patients of group C 96.1% (93.3% with dye and 1000% with the combined technique, P = 0.02). The false-negative rate did not reach statistical significance between groups. Although locoregional recurrence rate was similar in groups A and B (less than 1.88%) the distant metastasis rate was significantly lower in group A (0.9 vs. 6.6%, P = 0.04). Arm edema was significantly more frequent in group B (0 vs. 5.3%, P = 0.02). The combined technique, improves the ID rate of SLNs in patients with breast cancer. The recurrence rate in the axilla was negligible and the metastasis-free rate was better in patients treated with SLNB alone, which further supports the concept that ALND has no clinical relevance and adds nothing more than morbidity to breast cancer patients with clinically node-negative disease.

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