Axillary lymph node metastasis (ALNM) is commonly the earliest detectable clinical manifestation of breast cancer when distant metastasis emerges. This study aimed to explore the influencing factors of ALNM and develop models that can predict its occurrence preoperatively.Cases of sonographically visible clinical stage T1-2N0M0 breast cancers treated with breast and axillary surgery at West China Hospital were retrospectively reviewed. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed to evaluate associations between ALNM and variables. Decision tree analyses were performed to construct predictive models using the C5.0 packages.Of the 1671 tumors, 541 (32.9%) showed axillary lymph node positivity on final surgical histopathologic analysis. In multivariate logistic regression analysis, tumor size (P < .001), infiltration of subcutaneous adipose tissue (P < .001), infiltration of the interstitial adipose tissue (P = .031), and tumor quadrant locations (P < .001) were significantly correlated with ALNM. Furthermore, the accuracy in the decision tree model was 69.52%, and the false-negative rate (FNR) was 74.18%. By using the error-cost matrix algorithm, the FNR significantly decreased to 14.75%, particularly for nodes 5, 8, and 13 (FNR: 11.4%, 9.09%, and 14.29% in the training set and 18.1%,14.71%, and 20% in the test set, respectively).In summary, our study demonstrated that tumor lesion boundary, tumor size, and tumor quadrant locations were the most important factors affecting ALNM in cT1-2N0M0 stage breast cancer. The decision tree built using these variables reached a slightly higher FNR than sentinel lymph node dissection in predicting ALNM in some selected patients.
There is an error in the author list of this article. The spelling of the second author's name 'Rimas Luka' is incorrect and it should be the following correct spelling, 'Rimas Lukas'.
A 29-year-old right-handed G1P1 Caucasian woman presented with acute bifrontal headache (which resolved within 1 day), confusion, and difficulty using her right hand on postpartum day 10. She did not report nausea, vomiting, or visual complaints. The patient was previously healthy except for her recent preeclampsia, which required emergent cesarean section. On examination, the patient was afebrile, awake, alert, and apathetic. She was able to follow few one-step midline commands (e.g., eye opening and closing) inconsistently but not appendicular commands. Her neurologic deficits were remarkable for expressive aphasia, intermittent receptive aphasia, and hyperreflexia with bilateral extensor plantar responses. No meningismus or other focal neurologic deficits were present. Routine laboratory testing including urine toxicology screen was normal. C-reactive protein was 23 mg/L (reference range: <5 mg/L), and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) was 38 mm/h (reference range: 0-20 mm/h). Rheumatologic panel was negative. Brain MRI showed extensive non-contrast-enhancing T2/fluid-attenuated inversion recovery hyperintensities involving periventricular and deep white matter, especially the centrum semiovale, corpus callosum, bilateral anterior temporal lobes, bilateral caudate nucleus, and globus pallidus (figure, A-C). No evidence of acute or previous stroke was found. CT angiogram and venogram revealed no cerebral sinus thrombosis or large vessel vasculitis. Lumbar puncture opening pressure was 18.5 cm HO. CSF showed normal cell counts, protein, and glucose levels without oligoclonal bands. EEG recorded in awake, drowsy, and sleep state was normal. Dilated ophthalmic examination showed no microangiopathy or retinal branch arterial occlusion. Audiologic examination was normal.
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