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1.
Ann Surg Oncol ; 2024 Aug 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39120840

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Axillary lymph node dissection is the current standard for management of the axilla in inflammatory breast cancer (IBC). The present study aims to determine whether the initially positive node identified by clip placement accurately represents the overall nodal status of axilla after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) in IBC. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted on patients with IBC who underwent operation (2014-2023). For patients with IBC who had clip placement in a positive axillary node at diagnosis, operative notes, specimen radiographs, and pathology reports were reviewed to confirm final pathologic status of clipped nodes. RESULTS: In total, 92 patients with IBC (90 cN+) were identified (median age 54 years, 78% invasive ductal, 10% invasive lobular, and 12% mixed); 81 (90%) were biopsy-proven cN+, with a clip placed in the positive node for 62/81 (77%). All patients were treated with NAC and axillary surgery with median 19 (range 4-49) nodes removed. Among 28 (out of 56) patients with retrieved clipped nodes that were pathologically negative (ypN0), only 1 had an additional positive node with micrometastasis for a false negative rate of 4% (95% CI 1-19%). Conversely, 3/3 patients with isolated tumor cells (ITCs) only in the clipped node had additional axillary disease (ITCs in 1, macrometastasis in 2), and 20/23 (87%) of patients with pathologically positive clipped node (micrometastasis or greater) had additional positive nodes [19/20 (95%) with macrometastasis]. CONCLUSIONS: The clipped biopsy-positive axillary node in IBC accurately represented the post-NAC overall axillary nodal status. ITCs post-NAC should be considered positive as an indicator of additional nodes with metastasis.

2.
Ann Surg Oncol ; 2024 Jul 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39068307

RESUMO

In inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), obstructed lymphatics present a barrier to sentinel node biopsy. In theory this challenge could be overcome by clipping the clinically positive node at presentation and surgically retrieving it after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC). If the clipped node accurately reflects the axillary status, then deescalation of axillary nodal dissection could be a possibility in IBC with complete pathological nodal response post-NAC.

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