Prevention: tobacco control and cancer nursing |
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Authors: | L Sarna |
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Affiliation: | Department of Anatomic Pathology, William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Michigan 48073, USA. |
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Abstract: | Trends in surgical practice suggest that pathologists will encounter increased numbers of patients with small invasive ductal adenocarcinomas; small, if any, metastatic deposits in axillary lymph nodes (ALNs); and possibly fewer ALN specimens to examine. New prognostic histologic features may be needed in this environment. We studied histologic features of primary breast carcinoma and ALN metastasis from 86 patients who had stage T1 ductal carcinomas with only 1 ALN metastasis that was 0.5 cm or less and correlated these features with the development of distant metastases to evaluate their potential usefulness as prognostic indicators. The median follow-up period was 5.3 years. Distant metastases developed in 12 patients. Features significantly associated with 10-year distant metastases-free survival were lymph node hilar tissue invasion (HTI) and ALN metastasis size (stage N1a vs N1b). Tumor grade 1 vs grades 2 or 3 approached significance. The presence of HTI also was related significantly to a decreased 10-year distant metastases-free survival in the stage N1b group. Our study suggests that HTI, along with other well-known parameters, is a useful prognostic feature. In addition, it supports the opinion that ALN dissection may provide limited additional information for patients with grade 1, stage Tla, invasive ductal carcinomas. Additional studies are needed to confirm our findings. |
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