Histopathological work-up and interpretation of sentinel lymph nodes removed for vulvar squamous cell carcinoma |
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Authors: | Sigrid Regauer |
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Institution: | Institute of Pathology, Medical University Graz, Graz, Austria |
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Abstract: | Aims: To evaluate the work-up of sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) removed for vulvar pT1–pT2 squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Inguinal lymphadenectomy yields metastases in only 30% of cases. Patients with missed inguinal disease, however, have a risk of dying from systemic disease. SLN dissections reduce morbidity, but work-up should reliably identify metastatic disease. Methods and results: All SLNs removed from 38 patients with pT1–pT2 SCC and clinically negative inguinal lymph nodes were submitted for frozen section analysis. When negative, SLN were formalin-fixed, sectioned entirely at 330-μm intervals to produce three slides per millimetre two haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained slides; one slide for immunohistochemistry]. If screening of H&E-stained sections was negative, all remaining slides were subjected to immunohistochemistry with an antibody to cytokeratin. Twenty-five of 38 patients (66%) were pN0, 7/38 (18%) had metastases on frozen sections/H&E stains. Immunohistochemistry detected micrometastases in two patients and single tumour cells and anucleate cell structures in four patients. In 12/13 patients the SLN metastases, including all single-cell deposits, were from lichen sclerosus (LS)-associated SCC. Twelve of 13 patients with metastases had a pT2 SCC. Conclusions: Micrometastases and single tumour cell deposits in SLNs are typical of LS-associated vulvar SCC. Single tumour cell deposits in SNLs should be regarded as 'positive'. Identification requires serial sectioning and immunohistochemical analysis of all removed SLNs. |
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Keywords: | lichen sclerosus micrometastases vulvar carcinoma |
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