Inguinal sentinel lymph node biopsy for staging anal cancer.

G Péley, E Farkas, I Sinkovics, T Kovács, S Keresztes, Z Orosz, I Köves
Author Information
  1. G Péley: Department of Surgery, National Institute of Oncology, 1122 Budapest, Ráth Gy. u. 7-9, Hungary. peley@oncol.hu

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The optimal treatment of clinically negative inguinal lymph nodes in patients with primary anal cancer has not yet been clearly defined. The presence of metastases in the inguinal lymph nodes is an adverse prognostic factor for anal cancer. In the present study the feasibility of sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) for staging anal cancer was investigated.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: From September 1999 to March 2002, 8 patients with biopsy proven primary anal cancer underwent lymphoscintigraphy and dual-agent guided inguinal SLNB for nodal staging before starting multimodality treatment.
RESULTS: Inguinal SLNB was successful in all 8 patients (13 groins). A total of 20 hot and blue SLNs (mean 1,5 (1-2) per groins) were removed. In 2 patients (25%) the SLN was positive for metastasis.
CONCLUSIONS: Lymphoscintigraphy followed by dual-agent guided inguinal SLNB is technically feasible for staging patients with primary anal cancer. The detection of metastases in the removed sentinel lymph node(s) may alter the treatment and thus may improve the locoregional control and overall survival of these patients.

MeSH Term

Aged
Anus Neoplasms
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell
Feasibility Studies
Female
Groin
Humans
Lymphatic Metastasis
Male
Middle Aged
Neoplasm Staging
Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0patientsanalcancerlymphinguinalSLNBstagingtreatmentprimarysentinelnodebiopsyANDnodesmetastases8dual-agentguidedInguinalgroinsremovedmayBACKGROUNDAIMS:optimalclinicallynegativeyetclearlydefinedpresenceadverseprognosticfactorpresentstudyfeasibilityinvestigatedPATIENTSMETHODS:September1999March2002provenunderwentlymphoscintigraphynodalstartingmultimodalityRESULTS:successful13total20hotblueSLNsmean151-2per225%SLNpositivemetastasisCONCLUSIONS:Lymphoscintigraphyfollowedtechnicallyfeasibledetectionsalterthusimprovelocoregionalcontroloverallsurvival

Similar Articles

Cited By