Abstract
PURPOSE
Peritumoral and periareolar tracer injection techniques lead to different lymphatic drainage in sentinel lymph node biopsy procedures. In a prospective study, the visualization and identification rates of the ultrasound (US)-guided tracer injection technique for palpable and nonpalpable breast tumors were evaluated.
METHODS
In 1262 consecutive patients with cT₁₋₂N0 breast cancer, sentinel lymph node biopsy was performed following peritumoral tracer injection. In the case of nonpalpable breast lesions, Tc-99m nanocolloid injections were given using a 7.5 MHz US probe. In the case of ultrasonographically nonvisible microcalcifications, the US-guided injection technique was wire guided.
RESULTS
In 331 patients with nonpalpable breast lesions (26.2%), the lymphoscintigraphic visualization and surgical retrieval rates of axillary sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) were 98.5 and 99.4%, respectively. For internal mammary (IM) SLNs, these rates were 21.1 and 17.8%, respectively. These rates were similar in patients with palpable and nonpalpable tumors. Axillary metastases were detected in 38.7% of the patients with palpable tumors versus 16.5% of those with nonpalpable tumors (P<0.001), whereas IM metastases were found in 4.8 and 3.0% of patients, respectively (P=0.165).
CONCLUSION
In nonpalpable breast lesions, the US-guided injection technique is an accurate technique for SLN identification and retrieval. The substantial rates of IM metastases in both palpable and nonpalpable lesions favor a peritumoral tracer injection technique.
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