Essner R, Kojima M
John Wayne Cancer Institute, Saint John's Health Center, Santa Monica, California 90404, USA.
Ann Surg Oncol. 2001 Oct;8(9 Suppl):31S-34S.
Intraoperative lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymphadenectomy (LM/SL) provides a unique opportunity for assessing potential immunologic interactions between the primary tumor and regional lymph node basin. We performed LM/SL in 24 patients with early-stage melanoma and resected an additional nonsentinel node (non-SN) in each case. Sentinel nodes (SNs) and non-SNs were evaluated by routine pathologic analysis, and a portion of each node was processed for expression of three dendritic markers of activation (CD80, CD86, CD40) and their corresponding T-cell receptors (CTLA-4 and CD28). Twenty (83%) patients had matched SNs and non-SNs. A total of 26 nodal pairs were obtained because one patient had three pairs and two other patients each had two pairs. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analyses of paired SNs and non-SNs demonstrated a marked reduction in semiquantitative expression of CD80 (77%), CD86 (77%), and CD40 (85%), as well as CTLA-4 (88%) and CD28 (85%) in SNs. The diminished expression appeared to be unrelated to B-cell (CD20) and T-cell (CD2) expression. A quantitative reduction in dendritic cell markers in SNs may be important in the immunologic interaction between the primary site and regional lymph node basin and may also provide useful criteria for identifying SNs.