Publication details

Sentinel lymph node mapping and intraoperative assessment in a prospective, international, multicentre, observational trial of patients with cervical cancer: The SENTIX trial

Authors

CIBULA David KOCIAN Roman PLAIKNER Andrea JARKOVSKÝ Jiří KLAT Jaroslav ZAPARDIEL Ignacio PILKA Radovan TORNE Aureli SEHNAL Borek OSTOJICH Marcela PETIZ Almerinda SANCHEZ Octavio A. PRESL Jiri BUDA Alessandro RASPAGLIESI Francesco KASCAK Peter VAN LONKHUIJZEN Luc BARAHONA Marc MINÁŘ Luboš BLECHARZ Pawel PAKIZ Maja WYDRA Dariusz SNYMAN Leon C. ZALEWSKI Kamil ZORRERO Cristina HAVELKA Havelka REDECHA Mikulas VINNYTSKA Alla VERGOTE Ignace TINGULSTAD Solveig MICHAL Martin KIPP Barbara SLAMA Slama MARNITZ Simone BAJSOVA Sylva HERNANDEZ Alicia FISCHEROVA Daniela NEMEJCOVA Kristyna KOHLER Christhardt

Year of publication 2020
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source European Journal of Cancer
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Web https://www.ejcancer.com/article/S0959-8049(20)30367-1/pdf
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2020.06.034
Keywords Cervical cancer; Sentinel lymph node; Frozen section; Mapping; Ultrastaging; Micrometastases
Description Background: SENTIX (ENGOT-CX2/CEEGOG-CX1) is an international, multi centre, prospective observational trial evaluating sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy without pelvic lymph node dissection in patients with early-stage cervical cancer. We report the final preplanned analysis of the secondary end-points: SLN mapping and outcomes of intraoperative SLN pathology. Methods: Forty-seven sites (18 countries) with experience of SLN biopsy participated in SENTIX. We preregistered patients with stage IA1/lymphovascular space invasion-positive to IB2 (4 cm or smaller or 2 cm or smaller for fertility-sparing treatment) cervical cancer without suspicious lymph nodes on imaging before surgery. SLN frozen section assessment and pathological ultrastaging were mandatory. Patients were registered postoperatively if SLN were bilaterally detected in the pelvis, and frozen sections were negative. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02494063). Results: We analysed data for 395 preregistered patients. Bilateral detection was achieved in 91% (355/395), and it was unaffected by tumour size, tumour stage or body mass index, but it was lower in older patients, in patients who underwent open surgery, and in sites with fewer cases. No SLN were found outside the seven anatomical pelvic regions. Most SLN and positive SLN were localised below the common iliac artery bifurcation. Single positive SLN above the iliac bifurcation were found in 2% of cases. Frozen sections failed to detect 54% of positive lymph nodes (pN1), including 28% of cases with macrometastases and 90% with micrometastases. Interpretation: SLN biopsy can achieve high bilateral SLN detection in patients with tumours of 4 cm or smaller. At experienced centres, all SLN were found in the pelvis, and most were located below the iliac vessel bifurcation. SLN frozen section assessment is an unreliable tool for intraoperative triage because it only detects about half of N1 cases. (C) 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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