Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Radical surgery of breast cancer includes lymphadenectomy of axilla as well as the dissection of the neoplastic tissue. However recently many works have raised doubts on the opportunity of performing routinary axillary dissection, which elevates morbidity risk, in absence of axillary metastases. However, unfortunately, information on axillary lymph node pathology, is not available with any other technique excluding complete dissection and istopathological examination. Sentinel node technique is a new methodology that consents evaluation of lymph node status in the operating theatre. It allows the surgeon to judge on the opportunity of carrying out the lymphadenectomy or not.
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PMID:Sentinel node role in breast cancer surgery. 1220 69

Elective lymph node dissection is selectively performed in patients with clinically localised melanoma. Randomised studies suggest that survival is improved only in a few subgroups of patients, whereas all patients are exposed to the substantial risk of operative morbidity. Sentinel node biopsy enables the early detection of lymph node metastases from melanoma with less morbidity. The technique has been standardised. The sentinel node can be identified in almost 100% of the patients. The tumour status of the node is the most important prognostic factor in patients with clinically localised melanoma. This information is essential for studies of adjuvant systemic treatment. Regrettably, there is confusion about the definition of a sentinel node. In addition, the sensitivity of the sentinel node approach is unclear. Furthermore, it is uncertain whether early lymph node dissection improves regional control and survival. Sentinel node biopsy is not yet the standard of care.
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PMID:[Sentinel node biopsy in melanoma: some critical questions]. 1236 37

Sentinel node biopsy has the potential to provide more accurate staging information than axillary node dissection. Given the considerable morbidity of axillary node dissection this less invasive approach is attractive. However, there are a number of issues to be resolved before the best technique of sentinel node biopsy is determined. When large studies with long-term follow up demonstrate that lymphatic mapping to identify clinically occult lymph node metastases is as effective as we hope, then full axillary node dissection can be reserved to treat patients who indeed have lymph node metastases. Around 60% of the patients could then be spared an axillary node dissection that they do not need because they do not have metastases there. Modern technology is providing more accurate prognostic information based on primary tumor characteristics. Applying these technologies to sentinel lymph nodes may render the lymph node status even more relevant than it currently is.
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PMID:Status of lymph node staging. 1244 69

Sentinel node navigation surgery (SNNS) for gastrointestinal cancer has been examined using various methods, but the SN concept has not been established. For 18 patients who had colorectal cancer without macroscopic nodal metastases, we had attempted to detect sentinel lymph nodes (SNs) with activated carbon particles and investigate the existence of nodal metastases histologically. SNs were detected in 17 of 18 patients. Thus activated carbon particles are a useful tracer for SN detection. Three patients had microscopic nodal metastases, and two had nodal metastases in SNs. Although the remaining patient was a false negative case which had nodal metastases in non-SNs only, the nodal metastases were within the sentinel lymphatic region (SLR) which includes SNs. It is considered possible to safely perform minimally invasive lymphadenectomy for colorectal cancer without macroscopic nodal metastases, by means of SLR dissection using activated carbon particles.
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PMID:[Detection of sentinel lymphatic region with activated carbon particles in lymph node dissection for colorectal cancer]. 1248 57

Sentinel node biopsy may become a standard procedure to detect lymph node metastases in early breast cancer. Numerous studies have confirmed and demonstrated the reliability of the hypothesis of sentinel node biopsy, with a high identification rate and overall accuracy connected with dye-guided and radio-guided sentinel node biopsy. To assess the benefit of sentinel node biopsy, randomized clinical trials are underway in Western countries comparing sentinel node biopsy with conventional axillary lymph node dissection. In Japan, feasibility studies on sentinel node biopsy started in the mid-1990s. The dye and radiopharmaceuticals associated with sentinel node biopsy commonly used in Western countries are not available in Japan. Japanese investigators have attempted to perform sentinel node biopsy using other dyes and radiopharmaceuticals. The results from feasibility studies have been similar to those reported previously. In conclusion, sentinel node biopsy for breast cancer patients is successful in Japan. The current status and the problems are discussed.
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PMID:Sentinel node biopsy for breast cancer patients in Japan. 1248 80

Few studies have attempted to critically identify patient- and tumor-related factors that limit sentinel node biopsy (SNB). These studies have been limited by sample size and surgeon variability. The present study attempts to enumerate these limitations in a unique group of patients. One hundred twenty-five SNBs performed by a single surgeon between May 1997 and June 2001 were reviewed. Overall SNB was successful in 96 per cent of patients with a 97 per cent correlation with the axillary node dissection. Sentinel node identification was not affected by age, tumor size, tumor location, prior segmental resection, or neoadjuvant therapy. No false negatives were noted in the neoadjuvant group. The use of blue dye alone significantly understaged patients when compared with isotope alone (P = 0.02). SNB is a highly accurate method to identify axillary metastases and its limitations are not affected by patient or tumor related factors. In the present study SNB detection by both isotope and blue dye has been shown to be superior to blue dye alone. This finding demonstrates that these limitations may be overcome with the standardization of the technique used.
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PMID:Technical limitations of sentinel node biopsy in breast cancer: a single surgeon's experience. 1264 50

Lymph node involvement is an important prognostic factor in colorectal cancer. Sentinel node status has a significant impact on the management of breast cancer and melanoma. A 'sentinel lymph node' (SLN) is defined as the first regional lymph node to receive lymph flow from the primary tumour site. An electronic literature search was performed for all articles using key words: sentinel + lymph node + colorectal + cancer. The review indicated that the sentinel node model may help understanding different aspects of tumour biology in colorectal cancer. It will provide important information about variations in lymphatic pathways and skip metastases. It may alter the management if sentinel lymph node can be assessed preoperatively with radioisotope techniques by identifying patients with micrometastases who may benefit from adjuvant therapy. Although the sentinel lymph node concept has only recently been applied to colorectal cancer, it has a great potential for management.
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PMID:The sentinel lymph node in colorectal cancer - of clinical value? 1278 Jun 9

Sentinel node biopsy (SNB) has emerged as an accurate means of identifying nodal disease in patients with malignant melanoma. Superselection of pathological nodes has allowed improved pathological staging of disease. The aim of this study was to look at the impact of immunohistochemistry on pathological staging of sentinel nodes. The first 100 patients undergoing SNB for primary cutaneous malignant melanoma were included in this study. Sentinel node harvesting was performed with the aid of preoperative lymphoscintigraphy and the intraoperative use of both a gamma probe and blue dye. If the sentinel nodes contained tumour on either routine pathology or immunohistochemistry, patients were offered a therapeutic lymph node dissection (TLND). Patients underwent no other treatment to the primary lymph node basin if the sentinel node was free of metastases. In all, 95 patients had at least one node identified, and 25 were staged SNB positive and offered subsequent TLND. We found that 76% (19/25) of SNB positive patients were staged positive on routine pathology, and 24% (6/25) were staged with immunohistochemistry. Immunohistochemistry upstaged disease in 8% of patients (6/76). In all, 21 of the patients staged positive with SNB underwent TLND; 50% (8/16) of the patients staged sentinel node positive with routine pathology showed no further disease in the TLND, compared with 100% (5/5) of the patients staged sentinel node positive with immunohistochemistry only (P<0.05). Three patients have developed recurrence within the nodal basin following a negative SNB. The sensitivity of the procedure is currently 89% (25/28), with a mean follow-up of 24 months. Immunohistochemistry is an essential part of identifying micrometastasis in sentinel nodes, upstaging 8% of patients in our series. Patients with micrometastatic disease may well have a different prognosis from those with occult disease, and careful delineation of these patients is required to determine the prognostic influence of micrometastasis.
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PMID:The impact of immunohistochemistry on sentinel node biopsy for primary cutaneous malignant melanoma. 1279 61

Sentinel node (SN) biopsy in breast cancer patients following preoperative chemotherapy is associated with a decreased identification rate and an increased false-negative rate when compared to SN biopsy performed in untreated patients. We performed SN biopsy in 21 breast cancer patients scheduled for preoperative chemotherapy using either vital blue dye alone (n = 11) or in combination with a radiocolloid (n = 10). Following a mean of four cycles of preoperative chemotherapy, surgery to the breast and complete axillary lymph node dissection was performed irrespective of the SN status. A mean of 1.9 SNs were identified in all 21 patients, 12 were SN negative and 9 were SN positive. Preoperative chemotherapy decreased mean tumor size from 40.2 to 17.7 mm and breast conservation was possible in 14 of 21 patients (67%). All SN-negative patients and three of nine SN-positive patients had negative lymph nodes in the axillary specimen, whereas six of nine patients with a positive SN revealed lymph node metastases following preoperative chemotherapy. SN biopsy performed before preoperative chemotherapy found a 100% identification rate with no false-negative results. Following preoperative chemotherapy, SN-negative patients may forego a complete axillary dissection.
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PMID:Sentinel node biopsy performed before preoperative chemotherapy for axillary lymph node staging in breast cancer. 1284 61

Is there a role for sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy in the management of sarcoma? Sentinel node biopsy has dramatically changed the management of melanoma and breast cancer, helping surgeons avoid radical lymphadenectomies in node negative patients who would previously have undergone a more morbid operation with little benefit, or remained pathologically unstaged. Many investigators have explored the use of lymphatic mapping for malignancies other than breast cancer or melanoma. Lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy has not been investigated in the management of sarcomas, which is not surprising given that the majority of sarcomas spread by local extension or hematogenously. Regional lymph node metastases are rare; developing in about 3-10% of patients with localized disease. However, among certain subtypes of high-grade sarcomas there is a propensity for regional lymph node metastases. These include rhabdomyosarcoma, epithelioid sarcoma, clear cell sarcoma, synovial sarcoma, and vascular sarcomas. It is in these particular subtypes that there may be a benefit to SLN biopsy.
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PMID:Is there a role for sentinel lymph node biopsy in the management of sarcoma? 1295 24


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