4.6 Review

Options to Determine Pathological Response of Axillary Lymph Node Metastasis after Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Advanced Breast Cancer

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13164167

Keywords

breast cancer; lymph node; neoadjuvant therapy; neoadjuvant chemotherapy; sentinel lymph node biopsy; locally advanced breast cancer; positive lymph node; pCR; pathological complete response; surgical de-escalation

Categories

Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute [5T32CA108456, R01CA160688, R01CA250412, R37CA248018]
  2. US Department of Defense BCRP grant [W81XWH-19-1-0674]
  3. Edward K. Duch Foundation
  4. Paul & Helen Ellis Charitable Trust
  5. US National Cancer Institute cancer center support [P30-CA016056]

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This article reviews different options to identify positive lymph nodes at the time of definitive surgery, aiming to determine pathological response after neoadjuvant therapy and achieve optimal surgical outcomes with minimal complications.
Simple Summary Neoadjuvant therapy instituted prior to definitive surgery helps to reduce the tumor burden in the breast and axilla. De-escalation of surgery in the axilla may allow removal of just the involved nodes and sentinel nodes for determination of pathological response of previously biopsy proven positive axillary nodes. In order to attain the optimal surgical results with minimum risk of complications, it is important to choose the accurate method of identification of these positive nodes. In this review, we examine the different options to assure identification of the nodes deemed positive before neoadjuvant therapy, at the time of definitive surgery. Increasing use of neoadjuvant therapy in large tumors or node positive disease in breast cancer patients or hormone negative and HER 2 overexpressing cancers often gives rise to complete clinical response, with resolution of disease in the breast and axilla. These results have raised important questions to deescalate loco-regional surgical treatment options with minimum recurrence risk and treatment related morbidity. Although there is excellent prognosis following clinical response, the primary goal of surgery still remains to confirm complete pathological response in the biopsied node that was previously positive and now clinically/radiologically negative (ycN0). Biopsied lymph nodes are often marked with a clip to allow future identification at the time of definitive surgery. The goal of lymph node surgery in oncology is that it should be accurate, hence the significance of localizing the biopsied node. This article aims to review the different options to localize the deemed positive node at the time of definitive surgery, in order to help determine pathological response after neoadjuvant therapy.

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