Lymphoscintigraphy in the sentinel lymph node technique for breast tumor: value of early and late images for the learning curve1

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_36D582880CAD
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Lymphoscintigraphy in the sentinel lymph node technique for breast tumor: value of early and late images for the learning curve1
Journal
Medical principles and practice : international journal of the Kuwait University, Health Science Centre
Author(s)
Rousseau  C., Campion  L., Curtet  C., Classe  J. M., Dravet  F., Fiche  M., Sagan  C., Chatal  J. F., Resche  I.
ISSN
1011-7571 (Print)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2003
Volume
12
Number
1
Pages
17-22
Notes
PT - Comparative Study PT - Journal Article PT - Validation Studies
Abstract
As the performance of early (H+1 to H+4) and late (D1) lymphoscintigraphic images raises organizational problems in outpatient surgery for breast cancer, only early images are generally obtained. The present study evaluated whether two series of images are better than one and defined the advantages of both methodologies. One hundred and eighteen patients with infiltrating breast carcinoma (T(0), T(1) and T(2)) were included in the study: 87 in group A (early and late images) and 31 in group B (only early images). All patients received two peritumoral injections of (99m)Tc-sulfur colloid, 15-18 MBq (group A) and <15 MBq (group B). During the operation, the patent blue bye technique was associated with radioactivity detection. The two groups were comparable for histological type and tumor size and localization. Successful localization of sentinel nodes on early lymphoscintigraphic images was significantly greater for group B. The identification of a sentinel node focus on early lymphoscintigraphy increased by 10% during the study. Sentinel node detection by the isotopic method alone, or the two methods combined, was comparable for both groups. In radioactivity detection, the count rate for sentinel nodes versus background (contralateral breast) was similar for the two groups. During the learning phase, two series of images gave a definite advantage. Subsequently, lymphoscintigraphy performed at +2 h was sufficient (the results for the two groups became indistinguishable)
Keywords
Adult/Aged/Breast Neoplasms/Pathology/radionuclide imaging/surgery/Carcinoma,Ductal,Breast/secondary/Clinical Competence/Female/Humans/Lymph Nodes/Lymphatic Metastasis/Middle Aged/Preoperative Care/Prospective Studies/Reproducibility of Results/Time Factors
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
29/01/2008 19:33
Last modification date
20/08/2019 14:25
Usage data