Omission of axillary sentinel lymph node biopsy in early
invasive breast cancer
by Toralf Reimer
The Breast: Published: January 09, 2023
Abstract
Local treatment of the axilla in clinically node-negative
(cN0) early breast cancer patients with routine sentinel lymph node biopsy
(SLNB) is debated after publication of ACOSOG Z0011 data in 2010. Currently,
prospective randomized surgical trials investigating the omission of SLNB in
upfront breast-conserving surgery (BCS) and in the neoadjuvant setting,
respectively. Several prospective randomized trials (SOUND, INSEMA, BOOG
2013–08, and NAUTILUS) with axillary observation alone versus SLNB in cN0
patients and primary BCS have primary objectives to evaluate oncologic safety
when omitting SLNB. The Italian SOUND trial was the earliest to open in 2012
and has completed accrual in 2017. First oncologic outcome data are expected
soon for SOUND and at the end of 2024 for INSEMA. Improvements in systemic
treatments for breast cancer have increased the rates of pathologic complete
response (pCR) in patients receiving neoadjuvant systemic therapy (NAST),
offering the opportunity to de-escalate surgery in patients who have a pCR. Two
prospective single-arm trials (EUBREAST-01, ASICS) include only patients with
the highest likelihood of having a pCR after NAST (triple-negative or
HER2-positive breast cancer) and type of surgery will be defined according to
the response to NAST rather than on the classical T and N status. The ongoing
trials will hopefully help us to understand whether we might take the best
therapeutic decisions without the pathologic evaluation of nodal status.