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Annals of plastic surgery · Nov 2000
Sentinel node biopsy in melanoma using technetium-99m rhenium colloid: the London experience.
- C L Temple, C G Scilley, C J Engel, D T Shum, R C Lohmann, A G Mattar, and P L Zabel.
- Division of Plastic Surgery, London Health Sciences Centre, Ontario, Canada.
- Ann Plast Surg. 2000 Nov 1; 45 (5): 491-9.
AbstractNodal metastases in patients with melanoma identify a reduction of survival by 50%; however, elective lymph node dissection (ELND) has not been shown clearly to improve survival. Morton's technique of sentinel node biopsy, using preoperative lymphoscintigraphy and intraoperative blue dye, addresses elegantly the controversy regarding ELND. Sentinel node biopsy has been shown to stage the patient accurately because metastases from melanoma follow an orderly progression from the sentinel node to the remainder of the basin. Fifty-six consecutive patients with American Joint Committee on Cancer stage 1b or 2 melanoma seen at the London Health Sciences Center between July 1998 and January 2000 were enrolled prospectively to undergo sentinel node biopsy. Preoperative lymphoscintigraphy was conducted in the nuclear medicine department. A total of 10 to 15 MBq (0.27-0.41 mCi) of technetium 99m (99mTc) rhenium colloid or filtered sulfur colloid was injected intradermally around the biopsy scar. Images were obtained to localize all draining nodal basins. The location of the sentinel node was marked on the skin. The patient was taken to the operating room and anesthetized. Isosulfan blue dye was injected intradermally around the biopsy scar. A hand-held gamma probe was used intraoperatively as a guide to the first draining node. Blue-stained lymphatic channels aided in the dissection. Sentinel node localization was successful in 55 of 56 patients, for an overall success rate of 98%. Preoperative lymphoscintigraphy identified a sentinel node in an unpredictable location in 32% of patients. On average, 2.3 sentinel nodes per patient were identified on the initial scan, and 2.2 sentinel nodes per patient were recovered at surgery. Both 99mTc rhenium and filtered sulfur colloid showed no substantial differences in tracer uptake and retention in the sentinel node. Twelve patients had a positive sentinel node on routine histology, and 11 patients subsequently underwent completion lymphadenectomy. The mean thickness of the primary melanoma in the 12 patients with positive sentinel nodes was 3.7 mm compared with a mean tumor thickness of 1.8 mm in the remaining 41 patients with negative biopsies (p = 0.0003). Two patients experienced recurrence in a regional basin after negative pathological evaluation of the sentinel node. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis of both of these patients was positive. Two patients are alive with metastatic disease and 54 patients are alive without disease, with a mean follow-up of 1 year (range, 2-24 months). Complications occurred at a substantially higher rate (45%) after completion lymphadenectomy than after sentinel node biopsy alone (9%). Sentinel node biopsy is a feasible technique with a high success rate (98%), but it requires a multidisciplinary approach. This study validates the clinical usefulness of 99mTc rhenium colloid for lymphoscintigraphy.
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