Abstract :
Background: Axillary nodal spread is an established prognostic factor in breast
cancer. Axillary nodal dissection and subsequent pathological examination is
considered the gold standard technique of assessing the axilla for metastatic disease.
A minimum of ten level I axillary nodes are required to be examined before an
axillary specimen can be reliably labeled as disease free. This recommendation is
based on a mathematical prediction model and such methodology has certain
inherent limitations. In this study, we sought to revisit this concept of minimum
nodes required to deem an axilla as true negative by using a linear correlationmodel.
Methods: Medical records of 165 consecutive breast cancer patients attending a
medical oncology department for adjuvant therapywere assessed for inclusion. One
hundred and forty-five breast cancer patients in clinical stages I-III met the inclusion
criteria. Patients referred after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, breast conservation
surgery, palliative mastectomy, and mastectomy for metastatic disease were
excluded from the study. The study samples were segregated into groups of 1-5, 6-
10, 11-15, 16-20, 21-25, and more than 25 nodes. A linear regression model was
used to assess the association between the nodal positivity and nodal groups. The
spearman rho with P value was calculated for the model. Factors influencing the
nodal yield of an axillary specimen were selected from the published literature and
the same variables were evaluated in the study cohort.
Results:Atotal of 1882 nodes were harvested from 145 axillary specimens and
320 nodes were positive for metastatic disease. The mean nodal harvest per axillary
specimen was 11 nodes. The linear correlation model evaluating the association
between nodal positivity and total nodal yield showed a spearman correlation
coefficient of Rho = - 0.82 with P=0.04.To avoid bias due to the uneven sample size,
the nodal ratio was calculated for each group and the linear association model
reapplied to test the association with the total nodal harvest.Aspearman rho of R = -
0.94 with P=0.004 was obtained. The nodal groups tested for significance showed
P= 0.0001 for the group 1-15 nodes. Evaluation of the factors likely to influence
nodal yield showed that age (P=0.15) and obesity (P=0.67) had no effect on the
nodal harvest. Tumor stage (P<0.001) and operating surgeon (P=0.0001) had a
significant effect on the total nodal harvest.
Conclusions: The recommendation of a minimum of ten axillary nodes to be
examined to determine true negativity of an axillary specimen needs reassessment.
Anew minimum of fifteen nodes is suggested before an axillary specimen is reliably
deemed free of metastatic disease.