NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – With small breast cancers, doing complete axillary dissections only for positive sentinel lymph node biopsies (SNLB) yields the same 10-year survival – roughly 90% — as doing routine complete dissections in all cases, researchers say.

The report in the April Annals of Surgery that overall survival was actually slightly higher in women who had SNLB-based axillary dissection: 93.5% vs. 89.7%.

The status of the sentinel node can accurately predict disease in the other nodes, but Dr. Umberto Veronesi, from the European Institute of Oncology, Milan, Italy, and colleagues wanted to know more about survival when women had no positive sentinel nodes and so did not have complete node dissection.

In a randomized trial that began in 1998-1999, 516 women who had breast-conserving surgery for tumor of 2 cm or less had complete axillary node dissection either routinely (n = 257), or only when sentinel nodes were positive (n = 259). In a 2006 update, the researchers reported that “only one overt axillary metastasis occurred during follow-up of patients who did not receive axillary lymph node dissection (whereas eight cases were expected).”

Now, with 10 years of follow-up, they report that 26 breast cancer events occurred in the routine dissection group and 23 in the SNLB-based dissection group. Ten-year breast cancer-free survival rates were 88.8% with routine axillary dissection and 89.9% with SNLB-based dissection.

Of 174 patients in the routine dissection group with negative sentinel nodes, 8 had false-negative results. Based on this finding, the authors expected to see about 8 false-negative cases in the SNLB-based dissection group, but only two cases were miscalled.

The researchers conclude: “The long-term breast cancer-related event-free survival in the (sentinel node-based dissection) arm was similar to that in the (routine dissection) arm enabling us to affirm not only that sentinel node biopsy is as good as complete axillary dissection at staging the axilla, but that it is as safe as the once standard method of complete axillary dissection.”

Reference:

Ann Surg 2010.