Abstract

Background We investigated the results of quality control study prior to phase III trial of sentinel lymph node navigation surgery (SNNS). Methods Data were reviewed from 108 patients enrolled in the feasibility study of laparoscopic sentinel basin dissection (SBD) in gastric cancer. Seven steps contain tracer injection at submucosa (step 1) and at four sites (step 2) by intraoperative esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD), leakage of tracer (step 3), injection within 3 minutes (step 4), identification of at least one sentinel basin (SB) (step 5), evaluation of sentinel basin nodes (SBNs) by frozen biopsy (step 6), and identification of at least five SBNs at back table and frozen sections (step 7). Results Failure in step 7 (n = 23) was the most common followed by step 3 (n = 15) and step 6 (n = 13). We did not find any differences of clinicopathological factors between success and failure group in steps 1~6. In step 7, body mass index (BMI) was only the significant factor. The success rate was 97.1% in patients with BMI < 23 kg/m2 and 80.3% in those with BMI ≥ 23 kg/m2 (P = 0.028). Conclusions Lower BMI group showed higher success rate in step 7. Surgeons doing SNNS should be cautious when evaluating sufficient number of SBN in obese patients.

Highlights

  • Radical gastrectomy with D2 lymph node (LN) dissection has been the standard surgical treatment for advanced gastric cancer, it seems to be an overly invasive treatment for patients with early gastric cancer (EGC) because EGC shows limited LN metastasis and excellent survival

  • We evaluated the clinicopathological features of 108 patients including accumulation of case numbers, age, gender, body mass index (BMI), tumor locations, number and location of sentinel basin nodes (SBNs), Table 2: Clinicopathological factors associated with at least 5 SBN evaluations at back table and frozen section

  • A previous multicenter prospective clinical trial of Sentinel LN (SN) biopsy in Japan demonstrated that SN mapping for gastric cancer

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Summary

Background

We investigated the results of quality control study prior to phase III trial of sentinel lymph node navigation surgery (SNNS). Data were reviewed from 108 patients enrolled in the feasibility study of laparoscopic sentinel basin dissection (SBD) in gastric cancer. We did not find any differences of clinicopathological factors between success and failure group in steps 1~6. In step 7, body mass index (BMI) was only the significant factor. The success rate was 97.1% in patients with BMI < 23 kg/m2 and 80.3% in those with BMI ≥ 23 kg/m2 (P = 0 028). Lower BMI group showed higher success rate in step 7. Surgeons doing SNNS should be cautious when evaluating sufficient number of SBN in obese patients

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