The accuracy of the sentinel node technique in the evaluation of axillary node involvement in breast cancer was evaluated in 83 consecutive patients with monofocal T1-2 carcinoma, who were clinically N0 and who underwent lymphoscintigraphy with 99mTc-colloid integrated with intraoperative sentinel node detection by a portable probe. Lymphoscintigraphy revealed at least one sentinel node in 75 patients (90.4%), always identified by the probe. In eight patients (9.6%) the sentinel node was detected neither by lymphoscintigraphy nor by the probe. All removed lymph nodes were analyzed by hematoxylin-eosin histology and the sentinel node by immunostaining. In 28/75 patients (37.3%) at least one metastatic axillary lymph node was detected; in 16 of the 28 N+ subjects (57%) only the sentinel node was positive. The false negative rate (sentinel node negative/other axillary lymph nodes positive) was 17.85% (5/28 patients). In 9/23 patients (39%) micrometastases were found in the sentinel node only. In conclusion, specific sentinel node positivity in 57% of cases supports the validity of the sentinel node concept. Moreover, nine patients would have been considered N0 by standard hematoxylin-eosin histology without sentinel node-aided immunostaining. A 17.8% false negative rate calls for caution in patients with negative sentinel nodes.
The accuracy of the sentinel node (SN) technique in the evaluation of lymph node involvement in melanoma was evaluated in 71 consecutive patients with localized disease and Breslow index >1 mm. Lymphoscintigraphy identified at least one SN in 70 of the 71 patients (98.5%). The following day 69 patients underwent selective SN excision. The SN was identified by portable probe. One hundred and twenty-two lymph nodes were removed, 14 (11.4%) of which were metastatic in 9 patients (13%). No metastases were found in 40 patients with Breslow <2 mm. Eight of the 9 patients with positive SNs underwent lymphadenectomy of the whole basin and in two patients new metastatic nodes were found. At 4-26 months' follow-up 1 of the 60 patients with negative SN (scalp melanoma with Breslow 6.2 mm) developed bilateral cervical metastatic nodes. Two more patients with Breslow 3.7 and 5 mm, respectively, developed liver and lung metastases. The remaining 57 patients are still disease free. Among the 9 patients with tumor-positive SNs, 1 was lost to follow-up, 3 died and 5 are still alive. Our data confirm the clinical reliability of the SN technique in melanoma; we feel the technique should be considered a standard tool in the evaluation of melanoma patients.
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