articleNew England Journal of MedicineApr 3, 2024Closed access

Omitting Axillary Dissection in Breast Cancer with Sentinel-Node Metastases

Karolinska University Hospital

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Trials evaluating the omission of completion axillary-lymph-node dissection in patients with clinically node-negative breast cancer and sentinel-lymph-node metastases have been compromised by limited statistical power, uncertain nodal radiotherapy target volumes, and a scarcity of data on relevant clinical subgroups.

Methods

We conducted a noninferiority trial in which patients with clinically node-negative primary T1 to T3 breast cancer (tumor size, T1, ≤20 mm; T2, 21 to 50 mm; and T3, >50 mm in the largest dimension) with one or two sentinel-node macrometastases (metastasis size, >2 mm in the largest dimension) were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to completion axillary-lymph-node dissection or its omission (sentinel-node biopsy only). Adjuvant treatment and radiation therapy were used in accordance with national guidelines. The primary end point was overall survival. We report here the per-protocol and modified intention-to-treat analyses of the prespecified secondary end point of recurrence-free survival. To show noninferiority of sentinel-node biopsy only, the upper boundary of the confidence interval for the hazard ratio for recurrence or death had to be below 1.44.

Citation impact

252
total citations
FWCI
65.78
Percentile
100%
References
18
Citations per year

Authors

28

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Sentinel node
  • Axillary Dissection
  • Breast cancer
  • Medicine
  • Dissection (medical)
  • General surgery
  • Radiology
  • Oncology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
No related works found for this paper.

Funding