Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate the feasibility of sentinel lymph node mapping characterized by a cervical tracer injection in endometrial cancer.
Materials and methods: This retrospective study was carried out using data for 57 patients with endometrial carcinoma who had undergone intraoperative sentinel lymph node mapping and subsequent surgical staging. Technetium colloid and/or indocyanine green was injected into the uterine cervix and a gamma-detecting probe and/or photodynamic eye camera system was used intraoperatively to locate hot spots.
Results: Of the 57 patients, 52 (91.2%) had FIGO Stage I disease. Successful unilateral or bilateral mapping occurred in 54 patients (94.7%) and 46 (80.7%), respectively. The median number of sentinel lymph nodes detected was two (range, 0-5). Following sentinel lymph node mapping, 41 patients (71.9%) underwent pelvic lymphadenectomy alone and 16 (28.1%) full lymphadenectomy. The median number of lymph nodes resected was 17 (range, 8-110). Sentinel lymph nodes were involved in four patients (7.0%), two with macrometastases and two with low-volume metastases. The sensitivity and negative predictive value for detecting lymph node metastasis were both 100%.
Conclusion: Sentinel lymph node mapping with the use of cervical tracer injection is highly feasible in Japanese women with early stage endometrial cancer.
Keywords: Cervical injection; Endometrial cancer; Sensitivity; Sentinel lymph node; Uterine cancer.
Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier B.V.