Breast Cancer Clinical Trial
Surgery to Remove Sentinel Lymph Nodes With or Without Removing Lymph Nodes in the Armpit in Treating Women With Breast Cancer
Summary
RATIONALE: Removing the sentinel lymph nodes and examining them under a microscope may help plan more effective surgery for breast cancer. It is not yet known if surgery to remove the sentinel lymph nodes is more effective with or without removal of the lymph nodes in the armpit in treating breast cancer.
PURPOSE: Randomized phase III trial to compare the effectiveness of surgery to remove the sentinel lymph nodes with or without removal of lymph nodes in the armpit in treating women who have breast cancer.
Full Description
OBJECTIVES:
Compare the long term control of regional disease by sentinel node resection vs sentinel node resection followed by conventional axillary dissection in women with breast cancer who are clinically node negative and pathologically sentinel node negative.
Compare the effect of these two regimens on the overall and disease-free survival of these patients.
Compare the morbidity associated with these two regimens in these patients.
Compare the prognostic value of these two regimens in patients who are sentinel node negative or positive by pathology.
Determine whether a more detailed pathology investigation can identify a group of patients with a potentially increased risk of systemic recurrence who are node negative by pathology.
Determine the technical success rate of sentinel node dissection and the variability of technical success rate in a broad population of surgeons.
Determine the sensitivity of the sentinel node to determine the presence of nodal metastases in these patients.
Objectives of quality of life questionnaire in sentinel node-negative patients:
Compare the severity of self-assessed symptoms and activity limitations of patients treated with these two regimens.
Compare the severity of self-assessed symptoms and activity limitations after breast cancer surgery in patients whose surgery was on the dominant side vs patients whose surgery was on the non-dominant side.
Compare the impact of arm edema, range of motion, and sensory neuropathy on self-assessed measures of daily functioning, symptoms, and overall quality of life of patients treated with these regimens.
OUTLINE: This is a randomized study. Patients are stratified according to the surgical treatment plan (lumpectomy vs mastectomy), age (49 and under vs 50 and over), and clinical tumor size (no greater than 2.0 cm vs 2.1-4.0 cm vs at least 4.1 cm). Patients are randomized to one of two surgery arms.
All patients receive technetium (Tc 99m) sulfur colloid injected into normal breast tissue within 1 cm of the primary tumor or biopsy cavity and an intradermal injection of technetium (Tc 99m) sulfur colloid, approximately 0.5-8 hours before surgery. Patients also receive an injection of isosulfan blue dye around the tumor or biopsy cavity after a hot spot is identified with a gamma detector. If a hot spot is not identified, the blue dye is injected after a saline bolus injection.
Arm I: Patients undergo sentinel node resection immediately followed by conventional axillary dissection.
Arm II: Patients undergo sentinel node resection and an intraoperative examination of sentinel nodes.
Patients with positive sentinel nodes undergo axillary dissection after sentinel node resection.
Patients with cytologically negative sentinel nodes do not undergo axillary dissection.
Patients with cytologically negative but histologically positive sentinel nodes return to surgery for axillary dissection.
Patients with histologically positive sentinel nodes and those in whom the sentinel node is not identified undergo axillary dissection after sentinel node resection.
Patients with pathologically positive, nonaxillary sentinel nodes undergo axillary dissection after sentinel node resection.
Patients with evidence of tumor remaining after surgery undergo a total mastectomy.
Quality of life is assessed at baseline, at weeks 1-3, and then every 6 months for 3 years or until recurrence.
Patients are followed at 1 and 3 weeks, every 6 months for 3 years, and then annually thereafter.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: Approximately 5,400 patients will be accrued for this study within 4 years.
Eligibility Criteria
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:
Resectable invasive adenocarcinoma of the breast, confirmed by 1 of the following:
Histologically confirmed by core or open biopsy
Confirmed by fine needle aspiration cytology AND positive clinical breast examination and ultrasound or mammography
Clinically negative lymph nodes
No positive ipsilateral axillary lymph nodes
No prior removal of ipsilateral axillary lymph nodes
No suspicious palpable nodes in the contralateral axilla or palpable supraclavicular or infraclavicular nodes, unless proven nonmalignant by biopsy
No ulceration, erythema, infiltration of the skin or underlying chest wall (complete fixation), peau d'orange, or skin edema of any magnitude
Tethering or dimpling of the skin or nipple inversion allowed
No bilateral malignancy or mass in the opposite breast that is suspicious for malignancy, unless proven nonmalignant by biopsy
No diffuse tumors or multiple malignant tumors in different quadrants of the breast
No other prior breast malignancy except lobular carcinoma in situ
No prior or concurrent breast implants
Hormone receptor status:
Not specified
PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS:
Age:
18 years and older
Sex:
Female
Menopausal status:
Not specified
Performance status:
Not specified
Life expectancy:
At least 10 years (excluding diagnosis of cancer)
Hematopoietic:
Not specified
Hepatic:
No hepatic systemic disease
Renal:
No renal systemic disease
Cardiovascular:
No cardiovascular systemic disease
Other:
No prior malignancy within past 5 years except:
Effectively treated squamous cell or basal cell skin cancer
Surgically treated carcinoma in situ of the cervix
Surgically treated lobular carcinoma in situ of the ipsilateral or contralateral breast
No concurrent psychiatric or addictive disorder
PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY:
Biologic therapy:
No prior immunotherapy for this cancer
Chemotherapy:
No prior chemotherapy for this cancer, including neoadjuvant chemotherapy
Endocrine therapy:
No prior hormonal therapy for this cancer
Radiotherapy:
No prior radiotherapy for this cancer
Surgery:
See Disease Characteristics
No prior breast reduction surgery
Prior excisional biopsy or lumpectomy allowed
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There are 76 Locations for this study
Mobile Alabama, 36688, United States
Little Rock Arkansas, 72205, United States
Duarte California, 91010, United States
Loma Linda California, 92354, United States
Sacramento California, 95819, United States
San Diego California, 92120, United States
Stanford California, 94305, United States
Hartford Connecticut, 06102, United States
Washington District of Columbia, 20060, United States
Daytona Beach Florida, 32114, United States
Jacksonville Florida, 32207, United States
Miami Beach Florida, 33140, United States
Miami Florida, 33136, United States
Sarasota Florida, 34239, United States
Honolulu Hawaii, 96813, United States
Chicago Illinois, 60612, United States
Chicago Illinois, 60657, United States
Peoria Illinois, 61602, United States
Indianapolis Indiana, 46206, United States
S. Bend Indiana, 46601, United States
Des Moines Iowa, 50309, United States
Wichita Kansas, 67214, United States
New Orleans Louisiana, 70112, United States
New Orleans Louisiana, 70112, United States
Bangor Maine, 04401, United States
Baltimore Maryland, 21237, United States
Boston Massachusetts, 02118, United States
Worcester Massachusetts, 01655, United States
Ann Arbor Michigan, 48106, United States
Detroit Michigan, 48202, United States
E. Lansing Michigan, 48824, United States
Grand Rapids Michigan, 49503, United States
Kalamazoo Michigan, 49007, United States
Royal Oaks Michigan, 48073, United States
Southfield Michigan, 48075, United States
Kansas City Missouri, 64131, United States
Billings Montana, 59101, United States
Omaha Nebraska, 68114, United States
New Brunswick New Jersey, 08903, United States
Newark New Jersey, 07112, United States
Albany New York, 12208, United States
Winston-Salem North Carolina, 27104, United States
Winston-Salem North Carolina, 27157, United States
Fargo North Dakota, 58122, United States
Akron Ohio, 44312, United States
Canton Ohio, 44710, United States
Cincinnati Ohio, 45236, United States
Cincinnati Ohio, 45267, United States
Cleveland Ohio, 44106, United States
Columbus Ohio, 43206, United States
Kettering Ohio, 45429, United States
Portland Oregon, 97213, United States
Danville Pennsylvania, 17822, United States
Philadelphia Pennsylvania, 19107, United States
Pittsburg Pennsylvania, 15212, United States
Reading Pennsylvania, 19612, United States
Wynnewood Pennsylvania, 19096, United States
Spartanburg South Carolina, 29303, United States
San Antonio Texas, 78284, United States
Provo Utah, 84604, United States
Salt Lake City Utah, 84112, United States
Burlington Vermont, 05401, United States
Newport News Virginia, 23606, United States
Richmond Virginia, 23298, United States
Seattle Washington, 98109, United States
Tacoma Washington, 98405, United States
Charleston West Virginia, 25304, United States
Milwaukee Wisconsin, 53226, United States
Saint John New Brunswick, E2L 4, Canada
Toronto Ontario, M4N 3, Canada
Toronto Ontario, M5B 1, Canada
Toronto Ontario, M5G 2, Canada
Montreal Quebec, H2L-4, Canada
Montreal Quebec, H3A 1, Canada
Montreal Quebec, H3T 1, Canada
Montreal Quebec, H3T 1, Canada
Quebec City Quebec, G1R 2, Canada
San Juan , 00927, Puerto Rico
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