Volume 8, Number 10, 850-855, DOI: 10.1007/s10434-001-0850-6

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Single Intralesional Tracer Dose for Radio-Guided Excision of Clinically Occult Breast Cancer and Sentinel Node

P. J. Tanis, E. E. Deurloo, R. A. Valdés Olmos, E. J.Th. Rutgers, O. E. Nieweg, A.P.E. Besnard and B.B.R. Kroon

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Abstract

Background: The purpose of this study was to determine the feasibility of both lymphatic mapping and probe-guided primary tumor excision by use of intralesional tracer administration in clinically occult breast cancer.
Methods: Sixty patients with a clinically occult breast lesion were prospectively included. Lymphoscintigraphy was performed after intratumoral injection of 99mTc-labeled nanocolloid guided by ultrasound or stereotaxis. A catheter over a localization wire was inserted for intraoperative blue dye administration by using the same imaging techniques. After sentinel node identification, the gamma-ray detection probe was used for radio-guided wide local excision in patients who underwent breast-conserving therapy.
Results: A sentinel node was visualized on the scintigrams in 56 patients 93% and could be identified intraoperatively in 58 patients 97%. A sentinel node contained tumor in 10 17% of these patients. Extra-axillary sentinel nodes were visualized in 43%, were collected in 38%, and contained metastasis in 7% of the patients. Complete excision of the primary tumor could be accomplished in 39 87% of 45 patients.
Conclusions: Both sentinel node biopsy and probe-guided excision of a nonpalpable breast cancer is feasible with the aid of intralesional tracer administration. Sentinel node metastasis was found in 17% of the patients. A remarkably high percentage of extra-axillary drainage 43% was observed.

Key Words  Breast cancer - Non-palpable tumor - Sentinel node - Radio-guided surgery

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