De-escalating axillary surgery in early stage breast
cancer
by Eliza H. Hersh, Tari A. King
The Breast: Published: December 15, 2021
The role of axillary surgery has evolved over the last three
decades from routine axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) to sentinel lymph
node biopsy to omission of axillary surgery altogether in select patients. This
evolution has been achieved through the design and conduct of multiple clinical
trials demonstrating that ALND does not impact survival and is not necessary
for local control in patients with early-stage breast cancer and limited nodal
involvement. Importantly, this practice-changing shift mirrored the trend
towards earlier stage at diagnosis and the recognition of the interplay between
local and systemic therapies in maintaining local control. There are numerous
clinical scenarios today in which axillary staging can be safely avoided,
including (1) DCIS treated with lumpectomy, (2) at the time of contralateral
prophylactic mastectomy, and (3) in elderly patients with early-stage,
HR+/HER2-clinically node-negative (cN0) disease. Ongoing clinical trials seek
to expand the cohorts in which surgical nodal staging can be omitted. These
populations include a broader range of early-stage, cN0 patients undergoing
upfront surgery, as seen in the SOUND, INSEMA, BOOG 2013–08, SOAPET and
NAUTILUS trials. Omission of axillary surgery in cN0 patients with HER2+ or
triple-negative disease treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy is also being
tested in the ASICS and EUBREAST-01 trials. Continued advances in imaging and
the growing role of genomic assays in selecting patients for systemic therapy
are likely to further minimize the need for axillary surgery; thereby further
reducing the morbidity of local therapy for women with breast cancer.