Péley G, Farkas E, Téglás M, Orosz Z, Andócs G
Országos Onkológiai Intézet, Budapest Altalános- és Mellkassebészeti Osztály.
Magy Seb. 2000 Dec;53(6):241-6.
Sentinel lymph node biopsy is a minimally invasive operation for staging regional lymph nodes in breast cancer. This method was introduced in the last decade. However there are some remaining questions regarding labelling, surgical technique, indications, and the pathological examination of the removed sentinel lymph nodes which have to be answered before can be introduced as the routine clinical practice. 98 patients with primary breast cancer underwent double guided (radioisotope and blue-dye) sentinel lymph node biopsy in our department during a surgical feasibility study between December 1997 and February 2000. The operation was successful in 92 patients (94%). False negative rate, sensitivity and accuracy were 15%, 85% and 95% retrospectively. During the learning curve the success rate improved from 83% to 99%, the sensitivity from 79% to 89% and the accuracy from 88% to 97% and the false negative rate decreased from 21% to 11%. In T1 tumors the false negative rate and accuracy were 6% and 98%, while in T2 tumors these were 24% and 86%. Application of a larger particle sized colloid (200-600 nm), subareolar injection and next day operation technique had no effects on the results. Double guided sentinel lymph node biopsy is a sensitive surgical staging procedure which accurately predicts the lymph node status in T1 breast tumors. The technique used by us is easy to reproduce, and learn and is beneficial in technical and radiation protection aspects.