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A prospective study evaluating an optimized sentinel node algorithm in early stage cervical cancer : The PROSACC-study

Persson, Jan LU ; Lührs, Oscar LU ; Geppert, Barbara LU ; Ekdahl, Linnea LU orcid and Lönnerfors, Celine LU (2024) In Gynecologic Oncology 187. p.178-183
Abstract

Objective: A single center prospective non-randomized study to assess a systematically developed anatomically-based sentinel lymph node (SLN) algorithm in cervical cancer. Methods: Consecutive women with FIGO 2009 stage 1A2-2A1 cervical cancer undergoing robotic radical hysterectomy/trachelectomy between September 2014 and January 2023 had cervically injected Indocyanine Green (ICG) as a tracer for detection of pelvic SLN. An anatomically based surgical algorithm was adhered to; defining SLNs as the juxtauterine mapped nodes within the upper and lower paracervical lymphatic pathways including separate removal of the parauterine lymphovascular tissue (PULT). A completion pelvic lymphadenectomy was performed. Ultrastaging and... (More)

Objective: A single center prospective non-randomized study to assess a systematically developed anatomically-based sentinel lymph node (SLN) algorithm in cervical cancer. Methods: Consecutive women with FIGO 2009 stage 1A2-2A1 cervical cancer undergoing robotic radical hysterectomy/trachelectomy between September 2014 and January 2023 had cervically injected Indocyanine Green (ICG) as a tracer for detection of pelvic SLN. An anatomically based surgical algorithm was adhered to; defining SLNs as the juxtauterine mapped nodes within the upper and lower paracervical lymphatic pathways including separate removal of the parauterine lymphovascular tissue (PULT). A completion pelvic lymphadenectomy was performed. Ultrastaging and immunohistochemistry was performed on SLNs, including the PULT. Results: 181 women were included for analysis. Median histologic tumor size was 14.0 mm (range 2–80 mm). The bilateral mapping rate was 98.3%. As per protocol an interim analysis rejected H0 and inclusion stopped at 29 node positive women, all identified by at least one metastatic ICG-defined SLN. One woman awaiting histology at study-closure was node positive and included in the analysis. Sensitivity was 100% (95% CI, 88.4%–100%) and NPV 100% (95% CI, 97.6%–100%). In node positive women, the proximal obturator position harbored 46.1% of all SLN metastases representing the only position in 40% and 10% had isolated metastases in the PULT. Conclusions: Strictly adhering to an anatomically based SLN-algorithm including identification of parallell lymphatics within major pathways, partilularly the obturator compartment, assessment of the PULT, restricting nodal dissection to the removal of SLNs accurately identifies pelvic nodal metastatic disease in early-stage cervical cancer.

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author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Cervical cancer, Proximal obturator fossa, Sentinel lymph node, SLN-algorithm
in
Gynecologic Oncology
volume
187
pages
6 pages
publisher
Academic Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:85193955031
  • pmid:38788515
ISSN
0090-8258
DOI
10.1016/j.ygyno.2024.05.019
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
dc7d447a-17e9-408e-a886-f6188db8275d
date added to LUP
2024-06-05 10:55:32
date last changed
2024-06-19 11:42:15
@article{dc7d447a-17e9-408e-a886-f6188db8275d,
  abstract     = {{<p>Objective: A single center prospective non-randomized study to assess a systematically developed anatomically-based sentinel lymph node (SLN) algorithm in cervical cancer. Methods: Consecutive women with FIGO 2009 stage 1A2-2A1 cervical cancer undergoing robotic radical hysterectomy/trachelectomy between September 2014 and January 2023 had cervically injected Indocyanine Green (ICG) as a tracer for detection of pelvic SLN. An anatomically based surgical algorithm was adhered to; defining SLNs as the juxtauterine mapped nodes within the upper and lower paracervical lymphatic pathways including separate removal of the parauterine lymphovascular tissue (PULT). A completion pelvic lymphadenectomy was performed. Ultrastaging and immunohistochemistry was performed on SLNs, including the PULT. Results: 181 women were included for analysis. Median histologic tumor size was 14.0 mm (range 2–80 mm). The bilateral mapping rate was 98.3%. As per protocol an interim analysis rejected H<sub>0</sub> and inclusion stopped at 29 node positive women, all identified by at least one metastatic ICG-defined SLN. One woman awaiting histology at study-closure was node positive and included in the analysis. Sensitivity was 100% (95% CI, 88.4%–100%) and NPV 100% (95% CI, 97.6%–100%). In node positive women, the proximal obturator position harbored 46.1% of all SLN metastases representing the only position in 40% and 10% had isolated metastases in the PULT. Conclusions: Strictly adhering to an anatomically based SLN-algorithm including identification of parallell lymphatics within major pathways, partilularly the obturator compartment, assessment of the PULT, restricting nodal dissection to the removal of SLNs accurately identifies pelvic nodal metastatic disease in early-stage cervical cancer.</p>}},
  author       = {{Persson, Jan and Lührs, Oscar and Geppert, Barbara and Ekdahl, Linnea and Lönnerfors, Celine}},
  issn         = {{0090-8258}},
  keywords     = {{Cervical cancer; Proximal obturator fossa; Sentinel lymph node; SLN-algorithm}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{178--183}},
  publisher    = {{Academic Press}},
  series       = {{Gynecologic Oncology}},
  title        = {{A prospective study evaluating an optimized sentinel node algorithm in early stage cervical cancer : The PROSACC-study}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ygyno.2024.05.019}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.ygyno.2024.05.019}},
  volume       = {{187}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}