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1.
We assessed the feasibility of sentinel lymph node detection using technicium-99 radiocolloid lymphatic mapping for predicting lymph node metastases in early invasive cervical cancer. Thirty patients with cervical cancer (stages IA2-IIA) underwent preoperative lymphoscintigraphy using technicium-99 intracervical injection and intraoperative lymphatic mapping with a handheld gamma probe. After dissection of the sentinel nodes, the standard procedure of pelvic lymph node dissection and radical hysterectomy was performed as usual. The sentinel node detection rate was 100% (30/30). There were seven (23.3%) cases of microscopic lymph node metastases on pathologic analysis. All of them had sentinel node involvement. Therefore, the sensitivity of sentinel node identification for prediction of lymph node metastases was 100%, and no false negative was found. Preoperative lymphoscintigraphy, coupled with intraoperative lymphatic mapping, located the sentinel nodes accurately in our study patients. This sentinel node detection method appears to be feasible for predicting lymph node metastases.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVE: To describe our experience with the sentinel lymph node biopsy in cervical cancer patients, using a laparotomic approach and blue dye technique. METHODS: Between January 2003 and January 2005, patients with histologically proven FIGO stage IA2 to IIA carcinoma of the uterine cervix were submitted to SLN procedure if they were scheduled to have radical abdominal hysterectomy and pelvic lymphadenectomy. The SLN mapping was done after intracervical methylene blue (4 ml) injection. Final pathologic evaluation of SLNs included serial step sections and wide spectrum cytokeratin immunohistochemical analysis. RESULTS: Fifty patients were accrued to this prospective observational double-center study. A total of 86 SLNs (mean 1.9) were identified in the 45 patients with fruitful quest for SLN detection. The SLN detection rate per patient was 90%, and for the side of dissection, 72%. Bilateral SLNs were detected in 60% of cases. SLNs were identified in the external iliac and obturator areas in 55% and 38%, respectively; 5 isolated SLNs were discovered in the common iliac region. Ten patients (20%) had lymph node metastases; one of these had false-negative SLN. The false-negative rate and the negative predictive value, calculated by patient and by side of dissection, were 10% and 97.2%, and 8.3% and 98.4%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: SLN detection with blue dye is a feasible procedure, particularly useful as a surgical staging procedure in young patients with small tumors. The true morbidity-sparing role of this technique in cervical cancer treatment is yet to be found.  相似文献   

3.
OBJECTIVES: We investigated the feasibility of sentinel lymph node identification using radioisotopic lymphatic mapping with technetium-99m-labeled human serum albumin and isosulfan blue dye injection in patients undergoing radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy for treatment of early cervical cancer. METHODS: Between September 2000 and October 2002, 25 patients with cervical cancer FIGO stage I (n=24) or stage II (n=1) underwent sentinel lymph node detection with preoperative lymphoscintigraphy (technetium-99m colloid albumin injection around the tumor) and intraoperative lymphatic mapping with blue dye and a handheld or laparoscopic gamma probe. Complete pelvic or paraaortic lymphadenectomy was performed in all cases by open surgery or laparoscopic surgery. RESULTS: In 23 evaluable patients, a total of 51 sentinel lymph nodes were detected by lymphoscintigraphy (mean 2.21 nodes per patient). Intraoperatively, 61 sentinel lymph nodes were identified, with a mean of 2.52 nodes per patient by gamma probe and a mean of 1.94 nodes per patient after isosulfan blue injection. Forty percent of sentinel nodes were found in the interiliac region and 25% in the external iliac area. Microscopic nodal metastases (four nodes) were confirmed in 12% of cases. All these lymph nodes were previously detected as sentinel lymph nodes. The remaining 419 nodes after pelvic lymphadenectomy were histologically negative. CONCLUSIONS: Sentinel lymph node identification with technetium-99m-labeled nanocolloid combined with blue dye injection is feasible and showed a 100% negative predictive value, and potentially identified women in whom lymph node dissection can be avoided.  相似文献   

4.

Introduction

Conventional sentinel node (SN) mapping is performed by injecting a radiocolloid followed by lymphoscintigraphy (and SPECT/CT imaging). An extra intraoperative injection with blue dye can then allow for optical identification of the SN. In order to improve the current clinical standard, the hybrid tracer indocyanine green (ICG)-99mTc-nanocolloid was introduced, a tracer that is both radioactive and fluorescent. This feasibility study aimed to evaluate the value of a multimodal-based SN biopsy in vulvar cancer.

Materials and methods

Fifteen patients with vulvar cancer (29 groins) scheduled for SN biopsy were peritumorally injected with ICG-99mTc-nanocolloid followed by lymphoscintigraphy and SPECT/CT imaging to identify the SNs. In thirteen patients, shortly before the start of the operation, blue dye was intradermally injected around the lesion. SNs were harvested using a combination of radiotracing, fluorescence imaging, and optical blue dye detection. A portable gamma camera was used before and after SN excision to confirm excision of the preoperatively defined SNs.

Results

Preoperative lymphoscintigraphy and SPECT/CT imaging visualized drainage to 39 SNs in 28 groins. During the operation, 98% (ex vivo 100%) of the SNs were radioactive. With fluorescence imaging 96% of the SNs (ex vivo 100%) could be visualized. Only 65% of the SNs had stained blue at the time of excision.

Conclusion

ICG-99mTc-nanocolloid can be used for preoperative SN identification and enables multimodal (radioactive and fluorescent) surgical guidance in patients with vulvar cancer. The addition of fluorescence-based optical guidance offers more effective SN visualization compared to blue dye.  相似文献   

5.
AIMS: To evaluate the feasibility of excision of the sentinel lymph node under local anaesthesia in early-stage breast cancer. METHODS: Sentinel lymph node detection under local anaesthesia was carried out on all patients presenting with breast cancer at Stage T0, T1 or T2 < 3 cm and N0, M0. The lymph node was mapped using a radioisotope and patent blue dye and lymphoscintigraphy was routinely performed. No premedication was given, and local anaesthesia was carried out with xylocaine. The patients underwent tumorectomy one week later under general anaesthesia, with or without complete axillary dissection, depending on the results of the definitive histopathological examination of the sentinel lymph node. RESULTS: 78 patients underwent this procedure over a period of 20 months. The procedure was successful in 76 out of the 78 patients, with one failure in mapping and one failure in detection (detection rate = 97.4%). The mean time to detection was 21 min (range: 6-45). It was unnecessary to interrupt the procedure due to patient discomfort in any of the cases. One allergic reaction to patent blue dye was noted and required corticosteroid therapy without interruption of the procedure.The time to detection was correlated with the experience of the surgeon carrying of the procedure, the patient's body mass index and the number of labelled lymph nodes found at lymphoscintigraphy. CONCLUSION: We have shown that it is feasible to detect the sentinel lymph node under local anaesthesia in an unselected population. Using this procedure, patients can undergo surgery with the knowledge of their axillary lymph node status while at the same time avoiding the uncertainties of an intraoperative examination of the sentinel lymph node--a source of many false negatives, particularly in the event of micrometastases.  相似文献   

6.

Objectives

To analyze concordance between preoperative lymphoscintigraphy and intraoperative lymphatic mapping (ILM) for sentinel lymph node identification using technetium 99m-labeled-dextran 500 (99m-Tc) and patent blue dye in patients with early cervical cancer undergoing radical hysterectomy and pelvic lymphadenectomy, as well as to evaluate sentinel lymph node (SLN) detection.

Study design

Forty-seven patients underwent surgical treatment for cervical cancer. For SLN identification, 99m-Tc and blue patent were injected into the cervix on the eve and day of surgery, respectively. Preoperative pelvic lymphoscintigraphy was performed in all patients after 99m-Tc injection. Concordance between preoperative lymphoscintigraphy and ILM was evaluated.

Results

Of the 56 patients who underwent preoperative lymphoscintigraphy, 43 (81.13%) had at least one lymph node identified. Bilateral lymph nodes were identified in 21 (37.5%) patients. Sentinel lymph nodes detected on ILM had been previously found on preoperative lymphoscintigraphy in 66.7%, 67.2% and 0% in the right, left and central locations, respectively. In 14 patients (25%), only one lymph node was identified on preoperative lymphoscintigraphy, but more than one sentinel lymph node was detected on intraoperative mapping. In nine (16.1%) patients, lymphoscintigraphy showed only unilateral lymph nodes, but ILM identified bilateral sentinel lymph nodes.

Conclusion

The combination of patent blue and radionuclide techniques produced excellent results for SLN detection in cervical cancer. Preoperative lymphoscintigraphy does not offer any advantage over ILM for SLN identification.  相似文献   

7.

Objectives

We aimed to determine the sentinel lymph node detection rates, accuracy in predicting the status of lymph node metastasis, and if pathologic ultrastaging improves the detection of micrometastases and isolated tumor cells at the time of primary surgery for cervical cancer.

Methods

A prospective, non-randomized study of women with early-stage (FIGO stage IA1 with lymphovascular space involvement — IIA) cervical carcinoma was conducted from June 2003 to August 2009. All patients underwent an intraoperative intracervical blue dye injection. Patients who underwent a preoperative lymphoscintigraphy received a 99 m Tc sulfur colloid injection in addition. All patients underwent sentinel lymph node (SLN) identification followed by a complete pelvic node and parametrial dissection. SLN were evaluated using our institutional protocol that included pathologic ultrastaging.

Results

SLN mapping was successful in 77 (95%) of 81 patients. A total of 316 SLN were identified, with a median of 3 SLN per patient (range, 0-10 SLN). The majority (85%) of SLN were located at three main sites: the external iliac (35%); internal iliac (30%); and obturator (20%). Positive lymph nodes (LN) were identified in 26 (32%) patients, including 21 patients with positive SLN. Fifteen of 21 patients (71%) had SLN metastasis detected on routine processing. SLN ultrastaging detected metastasis in an additional 6/21 patients (29%). Two patients had grossly positive LN at exploration, and mapping was abandoned. Three of 26 (12%) patients had successful SLN mapping; however, the SLN failed to identify the metastatic LN. Of these 3 false negative cases, 2 patients had a metastatic parametrial node as the only positive LN with multiple negative pelvic nodes including negative SLN. One patient with stage IA1 disease and lymphovascular invasion had unilateral SLN mapping and a metastatic common iliac LN identified on completion lymphadenectomy of the contralateral side that did not map. The 4 (5%) patients with unsuccessful mapping included 1 who had grossly positive nodes identified at the time of laparotomy; the remaining 3 occurred during each surgeon's initial SLN mapping learning phase.

Conclusion

SLN mapping in early-stage cervical carcinoma yields high detection rates. Ultrastaging improves micrometastasis detection. Parametrectomy and side-specific lymphadenectomy (in cases of failed mapping) remain important components of the surgical management of selected cases.  相似文献   

8.
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to examine sentinel lymph node (SLN) detection in patients with early stage cervical cancer using (99m)Tc phytate and patent blue dye and to compare our method with published findings utilizing other radioisotopic tracers. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A total of 20 consecutive patients with cervical cancer scheduled for radical hysterectomy and total pelvic lymphadenectomy at our hospital underwent SLN detection study. The day before surgery, lymphoscintigraphy was performed with injection of 99m-technetium ((99m)Tc)-labeled phytate into the uterine cervix. At surgery, patients underwent lymphatic mapping with a gamma-detecting probe and patent blue injected into the same points as the phytate solution. RESULTS: At least one positive node was detected in 18 patients (90%). A total of 46 sentinel nodes were detected (mean, 2.3; range, 1-5). Most sentinel nodes were in one of the following sites: external iliac (21 nodes), obturator (15 nodes), and parametrial (7 nodes). Eleven (24%) sentinel nodes were detected only through radioactivity and two (4%) were detected only with blue dye. The sensitivity, specificity, and negative predictive value for SLN detection were all 100%. Nine published studies involving 295 patients had a summarized detection rate of 85%. Summarized sensitivity, specificity, and negative predictive value were 93%, 100%, and 99%, respectively. CONCLUSION: Combination of (99m)Tc phytate and patent blue is effective in SLN detection in early stage cervical cancer.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVES: According to recommendations, the sentinel node (SN) procedure results causes of less radical treatment and reduction of morbidity. DESIGN: The aim of this study was to determine the feasibility of sentinel lymph node identification using radioisotopic lymphatic mapping with technetium-99m labelled nanocolloid and blue dye injection in patients with early-stage cervical cancer. MATERIAL AND METHODS: 100 patients with FIGO stage from IB1 to IIA primary carcinoma undergoing radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy have been investigated. RESULTS: 84% of the patients have been diagnosed with at least one-sided SN and 66% of them with two-sided SN. The sentinel detection rates, depending on the stages, were as following: 181-96.6%, IB12-66.7%, IIA-62.5%. Successful identification of SN was less likely in patients with tumors > 2cm (54% of SN) compared with those with tumors < or = 2cm (96% of SN). The false negative rate for the SN procedure was 3% (3/100). In all false negative SNs the primary cervical tumor was above 2cm and there was an isthmus infiltration. SN detection had 86.4% sensitivity, 100% specificity, and 95.3% negative predictive value. CONCLUSION: Sentinel node mapping method for cervical cancer patients undergoing primary surgical therapy is a feasible option. The sentinel node detection rate is relatively high and depends on FIGO stage and the tumor size. The appliance of SN into cervical cancer procedures allows us to refrain from a surgery in favor of radiochemiotherapy, seems to be the right course of action in deciding treatment and may result in fewer postoperative complications rate.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to systematically review the diagnostic performance of Sentinel Node (SN) detection for assessing the nodal status in early stage cervical carcinoma, and to determine which technique (using blue dye, Technetium-99m colloid (99mTc), or the combined method) had the highest success rate in terms of detection rate and sensitivity. METHODS: A comprehensive computer literature search of English language studies in human subjects on Sentinel Node procedures was performed in MEDLINE and EMBASE databases up to July 2006. For each article two reviewers independently performed a methodological qualitative analysis and data extraction using a standard form. Pooled values of the SN detection rate and pooled sensitivity values of the SN procedure are presented with a 95% confidence interval (95% CI) for the three different SN detection techniques. RESULTS: We identified 98 articles, and 23 met the inclusion criteria, comprising a total of 842 patients. Ultimately, 12 studies used the combined technique with a sensitivity of 92% (95% CI: 84-98%). Five studies used 99mTc-colloid, with a pooled sensitivity of 92% (95% CI: 79-98%; p=0.71 vs. combined technique), and four used blue dye with a pooled sensitivity of 81% (67-92%, p=0.17 vs. combined technique). The SN detection rate was highest for the combined technique: 97% (95% CI: 95-98%), vs. 84% for blue dye (95% CI: 79-89%; p<0.0001), and 88% (95% CI: 82-92%, p=0.0018) for 99mTc colloid. CONCLUSION: SN biopsy has the highest SN detection rate when 99mTc is used in combination with blue dye (97%), and a sensitivity of 92%. Hence, according to the present evidence in literature the combination of 99mTc and a blue dye for SN biopsy in patients with early stage cervical cancer is a reliable method to detect lymph node metastases in early stage cervical cancer.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of our study was to compare the identification of sentinel lymph nodes (SLN) by blue dye and (99m) Tc; to evaluate detection rate per patient and specific side detection rate (SSDR) of SLN, distribution of SLN and distribution of positive SLN and false negative rate of the methods. PATIENTS AND METHODS: From February 2000 until September 2004, we included 183 women with early stage cervical carcinoma. We evaluated two methods of detection of SLN (100 cases by Patent blue, 83 cases by Patent blue with (99m)Tc). We stratified the group upon the size of the tumor and upon the type of surgical method (laparoscopy, laparotomy). RESULTS: SLN identification increased in cases when we used combination of both methods (Tc + blue dye) SSDR = 93% versus the use of blue dye only SSDR = 71% (OR:5,76, CI 95% -2.9 -11.4, <0.0001). Distribution of 462 SLN-45.0% external iliac artery and vein, 42.6% supraobturator, 4.8 bifurcation and common illiac artery and vein, 4.6% praesacral, 3% medial part of lateral parametrium. Distribution of 44 positive SLN-approximately 38.6% external illiac artery and vein, 45.5% supraobturator, 6.8% bifurcation and common illiac artery and vein, 4.5% praesacral, 4.5% medial part of lateral parametrium. One false negative SN was in presacral area. CONCLUSION: Detection of SLN by combination of (99m)Tc and blue dye was statistically significantly better than blue dye alone. Our study documents high sensitivity, specificity and low false negativity of the method.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND: The sentinel lymph node (SLN) could improve the staging of endometrial cancer. CASE: In a patient with endometrial cancer, preoperative lymphoscintigraphy showed a highly radioactive SLN in the left external iliac chain and a radioactive SLN in the right external iliac chain and at the promontory. Intraoperative lymphatic mapping using blue dye and a hand-held gamma probe showed the same nodes, as well as a blue node near the vena cava. Selective removal of these nodes allowed detection of a micrometastasis in the left external iliac node. Pelvic node dissection was performed, and a micrometastasis was found in a left non sentinel iliac node. CONCLUSION: The presence in our patient of micrometastases in a SLN and in a non-SLN belonging to the same chain confirms the value of SLN detection for diagnosing tumor spread.  相似文献   

13.
OBJECTIVE: Sentinel node (SN) identification in vulvar carcinoma would avoid groin dissection and its complications in early stages, but we first have to validate the method, as an unrecognised node metastasis is detrimental to survival. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Since June 2002, 38 patients with T1 or T2 lesions underwent SN identification by radioactive tracer injection and scintigraphy with, on the following day, per operative use of a handheld probe +/- patent blue dye. In case of a midline lesion, a bilateral inguinal dissection was performed whatever the result of SN identification. SN free from disease were ultrastaged with immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: 1 or more SN were identified in 36 out of 38 patients. 64 groins were analysed, 15 with node metastases. In 9 out of these 15 cases the SN was metastatic, in 5 it had not been identified, and in 1 it was a false negative. In these last 6 cases, there were massively metastatic nodes in the groin. In 19 out of the 26 midline lesions the surgeon identified only unilateral SN. The side without SN contained metastatic nodes in 5 cases. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Failure in SN identification is sometimes related to a massively invaded node. This should be taken into account especially in the management of midline tumors where a seemingly unilateral drainage at scintigraphy warrants nevertheless a surgical assessment of the mute groin.  相似文献   

14.
OBJECTIVE: To assess daily practice of 1000 sentinel node (SN) biopsies in breast cancer. PATIENTS AND METHOD: Prospective review of 1000 consecutive sentinel node biopsies between February 2001 and June 2004. Analyses concerned technical aspects of sentinel node detection, pathologic results of the tumor and sentinel node, treatment and follow-up. RESULTS: Nine hundred and seventy-eight SN were detected (98.7%). In univariate analyses, age, pathologic tumor size (20 mm) and method of detection (blue dye or isotopic vs. combined) were statistically significant. One hundred and fifty-six cases (16%) underwent immediate axillary dissection (AD), whereas 116 (12%) had a delayed AD. There were 923 invasive or micro-invasive carcinoma with detected SN: 282 SN (30.5%) were involved, either with macrometastases (166) or with micrometastases (116), 34% had positive non-sentinel node. Age and metastasis size were predictive for AD involvement. Sixteen percent of micrometastatic SN had positive AD, there was no predictive factor for axillary involvement. After a median follow-up of 20 months, there were 4 axillary recurrences: 1 (0.1%) after negative SN without AD, 1 (0.1%) after positive SN with positive AD, 1 (4.3%) after micrometatastatic SN without AD, and 1 (8.3%) after macrometastatic SN without AD. There were 55 ductal carcinoma in situ and 54 micro-invasive cancer: positive SN (with negative AD) were detected in only 2 cases (2.3%). There were initially 112 ductal carcinoma in situ diagnosed by percutaneaous biopsy, 25 of them (22%) had invasive disease on definitive histology. Among there, 12 had involved SN (with 4 positive AD). DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: With a high detection rate and low recurrence rate, SN biopsy is considered in our institute as a reliable procedure and is used to evaluate regional nodal status of early breast cancer. Thus, 70% of AD can be omitted.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to investigate the feasibility of sentinel node detection through laparoscopy in patients with early cervical cancer. Furthermore, the results of laparoscopic pelvic lymph node dissection were studied, validated by subsequent laparotomy. METHODS: Twenty-five patients with early stage cervical cancer who planned to undergo a radical hysterectomy and pelvic lymph node dissection received an intracervical injection of technetium-99m colloidal albumin as well as blue dye. With a laparoscopic gamma probe and with visual detection of blue nodes, the sentinel nodes were identified and separately removed via laparoscopy. If frozen sections of the sentinel nodes were negative, a laparoscopic pelvic lymph node dissection, followed by radical hysterectomy via laparotomy, was performed. If the sentinel nodes showed malignant cells on frozen section, only a laparoscopic lymph node dissection was performed. RESULTS: One or more sentinel nodes could be detected via laparoscopy in 25/25 patients (100%). A sentinel node was found bilaterally in 22/25 patients (88%). Histological positive nodes were detected in 10/25 patients (40%). One patient (11%) had two false negative sentinel nodes in the obturator fossa, whereas a positive lymph node was found in the parametrium removed together with the primary tumor. In seven patients (28%), the planned laparotomy and radical hysterectomy were abandoned because of a positive sentinel node. Bulky lymph nodes were removed through laparotomy in one patient, and in six patients only laparoscopic lymph node dissection and transposition of the ovaries were performed. These patients were treated with chemoradiation. In two patients, a micrometastasis in the sentinel node was demonstrated after surgery. Ninety-two percent of all lymph nodes was retrieved via laparoscopy, confirmed by laparotomy. Detection and removal of the sentinel nodes took 55 +/- 17 min. Together with the complete pelvic lymph node dissection, the procedure lasted 200 +/- 53 min. CONCLUSION: Laparoscopic removal of sentinel nodes in cervical cancer is a feasible technique. If radical hysterectomy is aborted in the case of positive lymph nodes, sentinel node detection via laparoscopy, followed by laparoscopic lymph node dissection, prevents potentially harmful and unnecessary surgery.  相似文献   

16.
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility and contribution of two intraoperative procedures of lymphatic mapping and sentinel node detection using a blue dye in surgically-staged patients with early stage endometrial cancer. METHODS AND MATERIALS: In 25 cases of endometrial cancer, patent blue-V was injected into the subserosal myometrium (13 cases, SM group) or cervico-subserosal myometrium (12 cases, CSM group) during a surgical staging procedure. Laparoscopically-assisted vaginal hysterectomy and pelvic lymphadenectomy were completed successfully in 23 women out of 24 laparoscopically-staged patients (95.8%). One patient with FIGO stage IIa was indicated for a radical abdominal surgery. RESULTS: A deposition of the blue dye was found in at least one pelvic lymph node (LN) in eight out of 13 cases (61.5%) in the SM group compared with ten out of 12 cases (83.3%) in the CSM group (p = 0.378). The mean number of dye-colored LN (DCLN) was 1.15 (SM group) and 2.5 (CSM group), respectively (p = 0.05). The rate of DCLN/LN was 15/188 (SM group) versus 30/190. respectively (p = 0.03). An uptake of the blue bye was observed in a total of 45 out of 388 LN. CONCLUSION: An intraoperative combination of cervico-subserosal myometrium application of the blue dye allows successful detection (83.3%) of sentinel LN in patients with endometrial cancer. Comparing SM and CSM groups the statistical significant difference was found in the DCLN/LN rate and mean number of sentinel lymph nodes (p = 0.03, p = 0.05, respectively). Clinical validity of this surgical procedure must be assessed prospectively.  相似文献   

17.
Sentinel node detection in cervical cancer with (99m)Tc-phytate   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to investigate the feasibility of sentinel lymph node (SLN) identification using radioisotopic lymphatic mapping with technetium-99 m-labeled phytate in patients undergoing radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy for treatment of early cervical cancer. METHODS: Between July 2001 and February 2003, 56 patients with cervical cancer FIGO stage I (n = 53) or stage II (n = 3) underwent sentinel lymph node detection with preoperative lymphoscintigraphy ((99m)Tc-labeled phytate injected into the uterine cervix, at 3, 6, 9, and 12 o'clock, at a dose of 55-74 MBq in a volume of 0.8 ml) and intraoperative lymphatic mapping with a handheld gamma probe. Radical hysterectomy was aborted in three cases because parametrial invasion was found intraoperatively and we performed only sentinel node resection. The remaining 53 patients underwent radical hysterectomy with complete pelvic lymphadenectomy. Sentinel nodes were detected using a handheld gamma-probe and removed for pathological assessment during the abdominal radical hysterectomy and pelvic lymphadenectomy. RESULTS: One or more sentinel nodes were detected in 52 out of 56 eligible patients (92.8%). A total of 120 SLNs were detected by lymphoscintigraphy (mean 2.27 nodes per patient) and intraoperatively by gamma probe. Forty-four percent of SLNs were found in the external iliac area, 39% in the obturator region, 8.3% in interiliac region, and 6.7% in the common iliac area. Unilateral sentinel nodes were found in thirty-one patients (59%). The remaining 21 patients (41%) had bilateral sentinel nodes. Microscopic nodal metastases were confirmed in 17 (32%) cases. In 10 of these patients, only SLNs had metastases. The 98 sentinel nodes that were negative on hematoxylin and eosin were submitted to cytokeratin immunohistochemical analysis. Five (5.1%) micrometastases were identified with this technique. The sensitivity of the sentinel node was 82.3% (CI 95% = 56.6-96.2) and the negative predictive value was 92.1% (CI 95% = 78.6-98.3). The accuracy of sentinel node in predicting the lymph node status was 94.2%. CONCLUSION: Preoperative lymphoscintigraphy and intraoperative lymphatic mapping with (99m)Tc-labeled phytate are effective in identifying sentinel nodes in patients undergoing radical hysterectomy and to select women in whom lymph node dissection can be avoided.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: Intraoperative lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node identification (SLN) have been increasingly evaluated in the treatment of a variety of solid tumors, particularly breast cancer and melanoma. We sought to evaluate the feasibility of these procedures in patients undergoing radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy for treatment of early cervical cancer. METHODS: Twenty patients with normal-appearing lymph nodes underwent intracervical injection of isosulfan blue dye (lymphazurin 1%) at the time of planned radical hysterectomy and bilateral pelvic/low paraortic lymphadenectomy (40 nodal basins). Regional lymphatic tissue was inspected for dye uptake into lymphatic channels and lymph nodes. Tumor characteristics, surgical findings, and specific locations of lymphatic dye uptake were recorded and correlated with final pathology results. RESULTS: Sentinel lymph nodes were identified in 12 of 20 (60%) patients. A total of 23 sentinel nodes were identified in 17 of 40 (43%) nodal basins dissected (range: 0-2 per basin). Successful SLN identification was less likely in patients with tumors >4 cm compared with those with tumors 相似文献   

19.
OBJECTIVE: To provide data from a US center on laparoscopic (LSC) approach to sentinel lymph node (SLN) detection in cervix cancer with detailed time analysis. METHODS: This prospective trial enrolled patients with stage IA2-IIA cervix cancer undergoing primary radical surgery. Tc-99 radiocolloid was injected the morning of surgery, followed by hybrid SPECT/CT lymphoscintigraphy. Blue dye injection occurred just prior to incision. After bilateral LSC SLN detection, all patients received complete LSC pelvic lymphadenectomy. Institutional SLN protocol was followed for frozen section, hematoxylin and eosin, and cytokeratin staining. RESULTS: Between December 2003 and February 2006, 20 enrolled patients received 9 LSC-assisted radical vaginal hysterectomies, 7 radical abdominal hysterectomies, 2 LSC-assisted radical vaginal trachelectomies, and 2 LSC lymphadenectomies alone (secondary to positive lymph nodes). Mean tumor size was 2.5 cm. Nineteen percent of the 64 SLNs were found in unusual sites, including common iliac (11%), presacral (5%) and para-aortic (3%). The negative predictive value was 100%. The combined technique detected SLNs bilaterally in all patients. If blue dye alone was used, this rate would have dropped to 67.5% and was negatively correlated with elapsed surgical time (-0.7; p=0.002). The ability to visualize blue SLNs remained steady for 30 min and was completely gone by 50 min. CONCLUSIONS: Laparoscopic SLN mapping can be newly introduced into gynecologic oncology centers with high detection rates and negative predictive values. The visualization of blue dye in SLNs is transient, and this negative time correlation may explain the previously reported inferior detection rates with this technique. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION.: ClinicalTrials.gov, http://www.clinicaltrials.gov, NCT 00205010.  相似文献   

20.
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of the study was to assess the feasibility of intraoperative sentinel node (SN) detection using injection of patent blue dye and radioactive tracer beneath the tumor of patients with endometrial carcinoma. METHODS: Hysteroscopy was used for injection of 2 ml of patent-V blue, followed by 20-50 MBq technetium-99 m-labelled nanocolloids into the subendometrial layer underlying the tumor of 60 patients with endometrial cancer. Then SN biopsy, pelvic and paraaortic lymphadenectomy, hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy were carried out through laparotomy or laparoscopy. RESULTS: Sixty patients aged 43 years to 87 years (median age 65 years) were enrolled in this study. Sentinel nodes were identified in 49 of 60 patients (82%). The mean number of SN retrieved was 3.7 per patient (range, 1 to 8). Sixteen patients (33%) had SN in both pelvic and paraaortic areas. No patient had SN only at the paraaortic level. Metastatic disease was found in 9 patients (15%). In 8 of them at least one SN was positive. CONCLUSION: Intraoperative sentinel node detection is feasible in patients with endometrial carcinoma using hysteroscopy for injection of blue dye and technetium-99 m beneath the tumor. This technique may actually enhance the chances of detecting metastatic disease, while reducing the extent of the surgery.  相似文献   

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