Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute (Dec 2018)

Axillary metastasis in clinically node-negative breast cancer

  • Orhan Üreyen,
  • Demet Kocatepe Çavdar,
  • Zehra Hilal Adıbelli,
  • Enver İlhan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 4
pp. 159 – 163

Abstract

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Aim of work: This study investigates the factors related to metastasis detection in a sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLN) in patients without clinical axillary involvement. Patients and methods: The medical records of patients who underwent an SLN biopsy after diagnosis with early-stage breast cancer were evaluated retrospectively. The study sample included 64 patients divided into two groups according to the histopathological examination of the SLN biopsy: Group I (positive for axillary metastasis) and Group II (negative for axillary metastasis). Results: The frequency of lymphovascular invasion was significantly higher in Group I (57%) than in Group II (13%) (p = 0.003). The progesterone receptor status (p = 0.036), tumor T-stage(p = 0,047), and Ki-67 index differed significantly (p = 0.045) between the two groups. While in univariate analysis, lymphovascular invasion, T-stage and KI-67 index were significant, in multivariate analysis only lymphovascular invasion was found to be significant. No significant differences were found in terms of estrogen receptor and HER2 considering tumor invasion type, histologic grade, vascular invasion, neural invasion, multifocality or bilaterality, hormone receptor status, menopause status, total number of lymph nodes, presence of non-sentinel lymph nodes and the number of SLNs in the groups (p > 0.05). Conclusions: The results of this study indicate that lymphovascular invasion is associated with axillary metastasis, based on an SLN biopsy.