4.6 Article

St Gallen 2019 guidelines understage the axilla in lobular breast cancer: a population-based study

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY
Volume 108, Issue 12, Pages 1465-1473

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/bjs/znab327

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. Skane County Councils Research and Developmental Foundation
  2. Governmental Funding of Clinical Research within the National Health Service (ALF)
  3. Swedish Cancer Society
  4. Erling Persson Family Foundation
  5. Kronoberg County Council's Research and Development Foundation
  6. Cancer Foundation Kronoberg
  7. Swedish Breast Cancer Association

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study found that patients with ILC were more likely to have luminal A-like breast cancer and a higher nodal metastatic burden. The proportion of patients with at least four ALN metastases was higher in ILC compared to NST, highlighting the need to pay attention to the potential risk of nodal understaging and undertreatment when omitting cALND in patients with ILC.
Background: The St Gallen 2019 guidelines for primary therapy of early breast cancer recommend omission of completion axillary lymph node dissection (cALND), regardless of histological type, in patients with one or two sentinel lymph node (SLN) metastases. Concurrently, adjuvant chemotherapy is endorsed for luminal A-like disease with four or more axillary lymph node (ALN) metastases. The aim of this study was to estimate the proportion of patients with invasive lobular cancer (ILC) versus invasive ductal cancer of no special type (NST) with one or two SLN metastases for whom cALND would have led to a recommendation for adjuvant chemotherapy. Methods: Patients with ILC and NST who had surgery between 2014 and 2017 were identified in the National Breast Cancer Register of Sweden. After exclusion of patients with incongruent or missing data, those who fulfilled the St Gallen 2019 criteria for cALND omission were included in the population-based study cohort. Results: Some 1886 patients in total were included in the study, 329 with ILC and 1507 with NST. Patients with ILC had a higher metastatic nodal burden and were more likely to have a luminal A-like subtype than those with NST. The prevalence of at least four ALN metastases was higher in ILC (31.0 per cent) than NST (14.9 per cent), corresponding to an adjusted odds ratio of 2.26 (95 per cent c.i. 1.59 to 3.21). Luminal A-like breast cancers with four or more ALN metastases were over-represented in ILC compared with NST, 52 of 281 (18.5 per cent) versus 43 of 1299 (3.3 per cent) (P < 0.001). Conclusion: Patients with ILC more often have luminal A-like breast cancer with at least four nodal metastases. Omission of cALND in patients with luminal A-like invasive lobular cancer and one or two SLN metastases warrants future attention as there is a risk of nodal understaging and undertreatment in one-fifth of patients.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available