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Usefulness of sentinel lymph node detection in early stages of cervical cancer

Sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping in combination with surgical biopsy is an emerging technique for use in the early stages of cervical cancer. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the technique in a series of 40 consecutive women with early stage cervical cancer. Forty patients with early stage...

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Published in:European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging 2005-10, Vol.32 (10), p.1210-1216
Main Authors: Roca, I, Caresia, A P, Gil-Moreno, A, Pifarre, P, Aguade-Bruix, S, Castell-Conesa, J, Martínez-Palones, J M, Xercavins, J
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c367t-f08cb507bff5ce2e67fc0d9aeb62d03986cc93478b520c416f632fa3f97fed353
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container_title European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging
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creator Roca, I
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Xercavins, J
description Sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping in combination with surgical biopsy is an emerging technique for use in the early stages of cervical cancer. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the technique in a series of 40 consecutive women with early stage cervical cancer. Forty patients with early stage cervical cancer [FIGO stage IA2 (2), IB1 (34), IB2 (1) or IIA (3)] were referred for radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy. Patients were submitted to preoperative lymphoscintigraphy (four 99mTc-nanocolloid injections around the tumour) and intraoperative SLN detection. Hand-held or laparoscopic gamma probes were used to locate SLNs during surgery. The mean number of SLNs was 2.5 per patient (interiliac 49%, external iliac 19%). Of the total of 99 SLNs, six, in four women, showed metastases (all 68 non-SLNs removed were negative). In the other 36 patients, all the removed lymph nodes (sentinel and non-sentinel) were negative (0% false negative rate). During the follow-up (median 25 months), only two patients presented distant metastases: one died 6 months after surgery (two of three SLNs positive, both hot and blue), while the second patient is alive 4 years after surgery (lung metastasis, no isotope drainage, negative blue SLN). The survival rate was 95% and disease-free survival, 97%. SLN surgical biopsy based on lymphoscintigraphy and blue dye is a feasible and useful technique to avoid lymph node dissection in the early stages of cervical cancer. It has a high negative predictive value, can be incorporated into clinical routine (laparoscopy or open surgery) and is close to achieving validation in this setting.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00259-005-1834-8
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The purpose of this study was to evaluate the technique in a series of 40 consecutive women with early stage cervical cancer. Forty patients with early stage cervical cancer [FIGO stage IA2 (2), IB1 (34), IB2 (1) or IIA (3)] were referred for radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy. Patients were submitted to preoperative lymphoscintigraphy (four 99mTc-nanocolloid injections around the tumour) and intraoperative SLN detection. Hand-held or laparoscopic gamma probes were used to locate SLNs during surgery. The mean number of SLNs was 2.5 per patient (interiliac 49%, external iliac 19%). Of the total of 99 SLNs, six, in four women, showed metastases (all 68 non-SLNs removed were negative). In the other 36 patients, all the removed lymph nodes (sentinel and non-sentinel) were negative (0% false negative rate). During the follow-up (median 25 months), only two patients presented distant metastases: one died 6 months after surgery (two of three SLNs positive, both hot and blue), while the second patient is alive 4 years after surgery (lung metastasis, no isotope drainage, negative blue SLN). The survival rate was 95% and disease-free survival, 97%. SLN surgical biopsy based on lymphoscintigraphy and blue dye is a feasible and useful technique to avoid lymph node dissection in the early stages of cervical cancer. 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subjects Adult
Aged
Cervical cancer
Female
Humans
Lymph Nodes - diagnostic imaging
Lymph Nodes - pathology
Lymphatic Metastasis
Middle Aged
Neoplasm Staging
Radionuclide Imaging
Reproducibility of Results
Risk Assessment - methods
Risk Factors
Sensitivity and Specificity
Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy - methods
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms - diagnostic imaging
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms - pathology
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms - secondary
title Usefulness of sentinel lymph node detection in early stages of cervical cancer
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