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Internal Mammary Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy With Modified Injection Technique

A Prospective Multicenter Clinical Trial of Internal Mammary Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy With Modified Injection Technique for Early Breast Cancer

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03541278
Enrollment
350
Registered
2018-05-30
Start date
2018-07-01
Completion date
2020-12-31
Last updated
2018-05-30

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Breast Cancer

Keywords

Breast Cancer, Internal Mammary Lymph Node, Internal Mammary Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy, Detection Rate

Brief summary

Internal Mammary Lymph Node (IMLN) and Axillary Lymph Node (ALN) are regarded as the first station of lymphatic drainage in breast cancer, serving as an important reference for lymph staging and decision-making. Although the concept of Internal Mammary Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy (IM-SLNB) has been included in the AJCC guidelines since the 6th edition, technical bottlenecks and clinical benefits still remained to be the main reasons limiting its clinical application: Technical bottlenecks: In previous clinical practice, the internal mammary visualization rate was very low (13% on average, 0% -37%) under the guidance of the traditional radionuclide injection technique, which became a technology bottleneck restricting the widespread of IM-SLNB. After continuous exploration, our center invented the modified injection technique of injecting the nuclide tracer into the mammary gland layer at 6 and 12 o'clock around the areolar under the guidance of ultrasound, as well as increasing the injection volume to increase the local tension. A high internal mammary imaging rate of 71% was obtained, which laid a foundation for the further study and clinical application of IM-SLNB. Clinical benefits: The IM-SLNB is a method to assess IMLN metastatic status in a minimally invasive way, which may improve the system of regional staging and guide precise IMLN treatment. However, based on the current IM-SLNB indication, the internal mammary metastasis rate was only 8%-15%, and it only had little influence on treatment strategy, which led to the controversy of its clinical application. Previous studies of extended radical mastectomy showed that in ALN positive patients the IMLN metastasis rate was 28-52%, while in ALN negative patients the metastasis rate was only 5-17%. Therefore, the continuation of the previous A-SLNB indication (clinical ALN negative) to IM-SLNB is apparently not in line with the current clinical practice, but further evaluation of internal mammary metastasis status in clinical ALN positive patients may receive greater benefit. This prospective multicenter study attempted to perform IM-SLNB with our modified injection technique both in clinical ALN negative and positive patients for the first time. Through analyzing metastasis rate of IMLN as well as the influences it had on decision making, we hoped to develop more accurate indication for IM-SLNB and guide the individualized precise treatment of IMLN.

Detailed description

Tracer injection and Lymphatic imaging: The radionuclide tracer (99mTc-Sulfur colloid) was prepared by the Nuclear Medicine Department and the sulfur colloid kit (equipped with a filter of 220 nm in diameter to control the size of colloidal particles) was prepared by Beijing Xinkesida company. All patients were injected with 99mTc-Sulfur colloid (1.0\ 1.2ml/29.6\ 55.5MBq) in periareolar parenchyma gland under the guidance of ultrasound using the new injection technique 3-18h before surgery. SPECT / CT lymphoscintigraphy was performed 30 min before surgery, and the radioactive concentration (hot spot) near the sternum was defined as IMSLN positive. IM-SLNB: After modified radical mastectomy / breast-conserving radical surgery, intraoperative γ-detector (Neoprobe 2000, Johnson& Johnson Company) was used to locate IM-SLN, and intercostal IM-SLNB was performed: open pectoralis major muscle, expose the parasternal intercostal space at the corresponding intercostal level (if the patient underwent breast-conserving surgery and the tumor was located in the lateral quadrant, an additional 3 cm of skin incision was required), cut the intercostal muscle at radioactive concentration site parallel to the rib, search and locate IMSLN with gamma detector, dissect precisely to avoid injury of internal mammary arteries and veins, and then sent the removed tissue to routine pathological examination. Pathologic diagnosis: IMSLN was divided into 2mm tissue fragments according to the long axis (short diameter \< 2 mm, no division), every tissue fragment required one layer of routine HE staining pathological examination. In this study, metastasis \> 0.2mm was defined as IMSLN positive, while solitary tumor cell was defined as IMSLN negative. Further IHC detection of CK-9 was required if the IMSLN was HE staining negative to exclude micrometastasis.

Interventions

PROCEDUREMIT

periareolar intraparenchymal, high volume and ultrasonographic guidance

PROCEDUREIM-SLNB

IM-SLNB was performed for IMLN visualized patients

Sponsors

The Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University
CollaboratorOTHER
Henan Cancer Hospital
CollaboratorOTHER_GOV
Shandong Cancer Hospital and Institute
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
18 Years to 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients with preoperative pathology confirmed invasive breast cancer; * Clinical T1-3 N0-3 M0 (with positive fine-needle aspiration result in their clinical or ultrasonic suspicious axillary lymph node ; no clinical or radiologic evidence of distant metastases); * Be able and willing to sign informed consent forms.

Exclusion criteria

* Patients with enlarged internal mammary nodes by imaging; * Patients who have received neoadjuvant therapy (including neoadjuvant chemotherapy and / or endocrine therapy); * Patients with a previous history of breast cancer (recurrence of breast cancer and contralateral breast cancer); * Patients with a history of other malignancies; * Patients who have had previous surgery in axillary or internal mammary; * Patients in pregnancy and lactation; * Patients participant in other clinical trials that will have an impact on the results of this study.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Visualization Rate2 yearThe internal mammary sentinel lymph node visualization rate with our modified injection techniques

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Clinical Benefits2 yearstaging and treatment change rate
Success rate of IM-SLNB2 yearSuccess rate of IM-SLNB in the IMSLN visualization patients who receive IM-SLNB
Frequency and Severity of Complications with IM-SLNB2 yearIM-SLNB complications in the patients who receive IM-SLNB
Metastasis Rate of IMSLN2 yearMetastasis rate of IMSLN in clinically axillary node-negative and clinically axillary node-positive patients

Countries

China

Contacts

Primary ContactYong-Sheng Wang, MD
wangysh2008@aliyun.com+8613505409989
Backup ContactPeng-Fei Qiu, MD
qiupengfei2002@aliyun.com+8618615205204

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 19, 2026