Prospective, Multicentric Registry Study Evaluating the False-negative Rate of Targeted Axillary Dissection (TAD) in Primary Breast Cancer With Initially ≥ 3 Suspicious Lymph Nodes Under Neoadjuvant Systemic Therapy (SenTa 2)
Due to high pathological complete remission (pCR) rates in both breast and lymph nodes (ypT0/Tis, ypN0) following neoadjuvant systemic therapy (NST) in many patients with initially clinically node-positive (cN+) breast cancer, the standard treatment of the axilla has changed from axillary lymph node dissection (ALND), which is associated with high morbidity, to less invasive, surgical approaches. In several studies, targeted axillary dissection (TAD) has presented with false-negative rates (FNRs) less than 5%, however, in patients with high initial lymph node involvement (≥ 3 clinically suspicious lymph nodes) TAD has not been thoroughly investigated. The present prospective registry study aims to evaluate the FNR of TAD in patients with ≥ 3 initially suspicious lymph nodes and clinically node-negative status (ycN0) after NST in comparison to ALND.
• signed informed consent form
• female/male patient aged ≥ 18 years
• clinical (c) tumor stage T1-4c, bilateral breast cancer and multifocal tumor allowed
• invasive breast cancer confirmed by core biopsy
• clinically node positive (cN+) (by means of axillary ultrasound or other imaging methods) with ≥ 3 clinically suspicious lymph nodes
• biopsy-proven axillary lymph node involvement
• marking (e.g. with a clip, magnetic seed, carbon suspension) of the clinically suspicious lymph node(s) before the start of NST
• without distant metastases
• indication for NST including chemotherapy
• TAD + ALND planned
• at least 7 lymph nodes (TAD + ALND) planned for histological analysis