Less invasive biopsy for large tumors.

PositionBreast Cancer

New breast cancer research shows for the first time that even women with large breast tumors can benefit from a less invasive biopsy method that has been reserved until now for those with smaller lumps. Lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy, when used to determine how far the cancer has progressed into the lymph nodes, can help some patients avoid the pain and discomfort of full armpit node removal, which often causes swelling, numbness, and infection.

"The study suggests that sentinel node biopsy is an option that might benefit all women with breast cancer," contends David W. Ollila, an associate professor of surgery and a member of the Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. "I think any woman diagnosed with breast cancer should ask her physician what role this technique might play in her overall treatment."

Lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymphadenectomy before chemotherapy is the standard of care for patients with small breast cancers. Yet, its use on larger tumors has been controversial because of lack of reliability.

In sentinel node biopsy, a surgeon injects the area near the tumor with a blue dye, which follows the path that tumor cells most likely would take to the lymph nodes. The surgeon removes only the nodes that initially absorb the dye. These are thought to be the "sentinel" nodes, those to which cancer cells are more likely to travel. If the biopsy finds no cancer in the sentinel nodes, then no further nodes are removed.

Subjects in the study had tumors large enough that the breast could not be preserved. Such patients typically received neoadjuvant chemotherapy to shrink the tumor before surgery--thus decreasing the possibility of recurrence and, for a small number of women, making it feasible to have a lumpectomy rather than a mastectomy.

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