Tailored axillary surgery in patients with clinically node-positive breast cancer: Pre-planned feasibility substudy of TAXIS (OPBC-03, SAKK 23/16, IBCSG 57-18, ABCSG-53, GBG 101).

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_A53E8B629366
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Tailored axillary surgery in patients with clinically node-positive breast cancer: Pre-planned feasibility substudy of TAXIS (OPBC-03, SAKK 23/16, IBCSG 57-18, ABCSG-53, GBG 101).
Journal
Breast
Author(s)
Weber W.P., Matrai Z., Hayoz S., Tausch C., Henke G., Zwahlen D.R., Gruber G., Zimmermann F., Seiler S., Maddox C., Ruhstaller T., Muenst S., Ackerknecht M., Kuemmel S., Bjelic-Radisic V., Kurzeder C., Újhelyi M., Vrieling C., Satler R., Meyer I., Becciolini C., Bucher S., Simonson C., Fehr P.M., Gabriel N., Maráz R., Sarlos D., Dedes K.J., Leo C., Berclaz G., Dubsky P., Exner R., Fansa H., Hager C., Reisenberger K., Singer C.F., Reitsamer R., Reinisch M., Winkler J., Lam G.T., Fehr M.K., Naydina T., Kohlik M., Clerc K., Ostapenko V., Fitzal F., Nussbaumer R., Maggi N., Schulz A., Markellou P., Lelièvre L., Egle D., Heil J., Knauer M.
ISSN
1532-3080 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0960-9776
Publication state
Published
Issued date
12/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
60
Pages
98-110
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Multicenter Study ; Randomized Controlled Trial
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
We developed tailored axillary surgery (TAS) to reduce the axillary tumor volume in patients with clinically node-positive breast cancer to the point where radiotherapy can control it. The aim of this study was to quantify the extent of tumor load reduction achieved by TAS.
International multicenter prospective study embedded in a randomized trial. TAS is a novel pragmatic concept for axillary surgery de-escalation that combines palpation-guided removal of suspicious nodes with the sentinel procedure and, optionally, imaging-guided localization. Pre-specified study endpoints quantified surgical extent and reduction of tumor load.
A total of 296 patients were included at 28 sites in four European countries, 125 (42.2%) of whom underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) and 71 (24.0%) achieved nodal pathologic complete response. Axillary metastases were detectable only by imaging in 145 (49.0%) patients. They were palpable in 151 (51.0%) patients, of whom 63 underwent NACT and 21 had residual palpable disease after NACT. TAS removed the biopsied and clipped node in 279 (94.3%) patients. In 225 patients with nodal disease at the time of surgery, TAS removed a median of five (IQR 3-7) nodes, two (IQR 1-4) of which were positive. Of these 225 patients, 100 underwent ALND after TAS, which removed a median of 14 (IQR 10-17) additional nodes and revealed additional positive nodes in 70/100 (70%) of patients. False-negative rate of TAS in patients who underwent subsequent ALND was 2.6%.
TAS selectively reduced the tumor load in the axilla and remained much less radical than ALND.
Keywords
Axilla/pathology, Breast Neoplasms/drug therapy, Breast Neoplasms/pathology, Breast Neoplasms/surgery, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Lymph Node Excision, Lymph Nodes/pathology, Lymph Nodes/surgery, Neoplasm Staging, Prospective Studies, Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy, Axillary dissection, Axillary staging, Breast cancer, Breast surgery, Sentinel lymph node procedure
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
04/10/2021 11:51
Last modification date
16/03/2024 8:57
Usage data