AXILLARY LYMPH NODE CLIP PLACEMENT AND RESECTION AT SURGERY: A SINGLE-CENTER STUDY

Autores

  • Graziela Couto de Carvalho Beneficência Portuguesa de São Paulo – São Paulo (SP), Brazil.
  • Heloisa Helena Gonçalves Rengel Beneficência Portuguesa de São Paulo – São Paulo (SP), Brazil.
  • Barbara Barbosa Monteiro Beneficência Portuguesa de São Paulo – São Paulo (SP), Brazil.
  • Larissa Scarabucci Venezian Beneficência Portuguesa de São Paulo – São Paulo (SP), Brazil.
  • Aline Campos Oliveira Mello Beneficência Portuguesa de São Paulo – São Paulo (SP), Brazil.
  • Fábio Francisco Oliveira Rodrigues Beneficência Portuguesa de São Paulo – São Paulo (SP), Brazil.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29289/259453942022V32S2072

Palavras-chave:

sentinel node biopsy

Resumo

Objective: This study aims to identify the characteristics of patients who underwent axillary lymph node clipping (ALC)
and determine the detection rate with sentinel node biopsy (SNB). Methods: This is a retrospective study with a review
of medical records, including patients who were submitted to ALC from 2018 to 2021 and who underwent neoadjuvant
chemotherapy (CH) or upfront surgery. In patients with SNB, the clipped node was marked with Technetium-99m before
surgery. Results: We identified 13 patients who underwent ALC at diagnosis: 8 were submitted to SNB and 5 to axillary
dissection without SNB (4 due to poor response to CH, 1 due to lobular histology with upfront surgery). The mean age
was 54 years (38% <50 years). The clinical staging was: 12 with cT2cN1 — IIB and 1 with cT3cN2 — IIIA. Concerning
tumor characteristics, 12 (92%) patients had ductal histology and 1 lobular; 3 patients had triple-negative disease (23%), 8
patients had luminal disease (61%), and 2 patients had triple-positive disease (15%). In 4 of the 8 patients who underwent
SNB, the clip was identified in the image after surgery (2) or in the frozen section (2), and in 4 patients, no information
regarding the localization of the clip was obtained in the records regarding the surgery. However, in the follow-up images,
the axillary clip was not identified, presuming that it was removed. Considering the patients who did SNB, the detection
rate was 50%. Conclusion: According to previous studies, ALC at the time of diagnosis is a useful tool to guide targeted
axillary dissection, reducing the false-negative rate (FNR) of SNB after CH. It is important that the clip removal check is
performed. Our results reflect that this verification is not always performed, which may have reduced identification rates.
However, this study encourages further prospective studies to be carried out, with standardization of techniques for clip
identification, improving detection rates, and reducing FNR of SNB in these patients.

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Publicado

2026-04-01

Como Citar

Carvalho, G. C. de, Rengel, H. H. G., Monteiro, B. B., Venezian, L. S., Mello, A. C. O., & Rodrigues, F. F. O. (2026). AXILLARY LYMPH NODE CLIP PLACEMENT AND RESECTION AT SURGERY: A SINGLE-CENTER STUDY. Mastology, 32(suppl.2). https://doi.org/10.29289/259453942022V32S2072

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