Sentinel Lymph Node in Breast Cancer: Review Article from a Pathologist’s Point of View

Breast cancer staging, in particular N-stage changed most significantly due to the advanced technique of sentinel lymph node biopsy two decades ago. Pathologists have more thoroughly examined and scrutinized sentinel lymph node and found increased number of small volume metastases. While pathologist...

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Main Author: Sophia K. Apple
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Society of Pathologists & the Korean Society for Cytopathology 2016-03-01
Series:Journal of Pathology and Translational Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jpatholtm.org/upload/pdf/jptm-2015-11-23.pdf
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spelling doaj-ca2070a985c747ddae8cc1f3c6a324102020-11-24T23:23:12ZengKorean Society of Pathologists & the Korean Society for CytopathologyJournal of Pathology and Translational Medicine2383-78372383-78452016-03-01502839510.4132/jptm.2015.11.2316588Sentinel Lymph Node in Breast Cancer: Review Article from a Pathologist’s Point of ViewSophia K. AppleBreast cancer staging, in particular N-stage changed most significantly due to the advanced technique of sentinel lymph node biopsy two decades ago. Pathologists have more thoroughly examined and scrutinized sentinel lymph node and found increased number of small volume metastases. While pathologists use the strict criteria from the Tumor Lymph Node Metastasis (TNM) Classification, studies have shown poor reproducibility in the application of American Joint Committee on Cancer and International Union Against Cancer/TNM guidelines for sentinel lymph node classification in breast cancer. In this review article, a brief history of TNM with a focus on N-stage is described, followed by innate problems with the guidelines, and why pathologists may have difficulties in assessing lymph node metastases uniformly. Finally, clinical significance of isolated tumor cells, micrometastasis, and macrometastasis is described by reviewing historical retrospective data and significant prospective clinical trials.http://www.jpatholtm.org/upload/pdf/jptm-2015-11-23.pdfSentinel lymph nodeN-stageIsolated tumor cellsMicrometastasisMacrometastasis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophia K. Apple
spellingShingle Sophia K. Apple
Sentinel Lymph Node in Breast Cancer: Review Article from a Pathologist’s Point of View
Journal of Pathology and Translational Medicine
Sentinel lymph node
N-stage
Isolated tumor cells
Micrometastasis
Macrometastasis
author_facet Sophia K. Apple
author_sort Sophia K. Apple
title Sentinel Lymph Node in Breast Cancer: Review Article from a Pathologist’s Point of View
title_short Sentinel Lymph Node in Breast Cancer: Review Article from a Pathologist’s Point of View
title_full Sentinel Lymph Node in Breast Cancer: Review Article from a Pathologist’s Point of View
title_fullStr Sentinel Lymph Node in Breast Cancer: Review Article from a Pathologist’s Point of View
title_full_unstemmed Sentinel Lymph Node in Breast Cancer: Review Article from a Pathologist’s Point of View
title_sort sentinel lymph node in breast cancer: review article from a pathologist’s point of view
publisher Korean Society of Pathologists & the Korean Society for Cytopathology
series Journal of Pathology and Translational Medicine
issn 2383-7837
2383-7845
publishDate 2016-03-01
description Breast cancer staging, in particular N-stage changed most significantly due to the advanced technique of sentinel lymph node biopsy two decades ago. Pathologists have more thoroughly examined and scrutinized sentinel lymph node and found increased number of small volume metastases. While pathologists use the strict criteria from the Tumor Lymph Node Metastasis (TNM) Classification, studies have shown poor reproducibility in the application of American Joint Committee on Cancer and International Union Against Cancer/TNM guidelines for sentinel lymph node classification in breast cancer. In this review article, a brief history of TNM with a focus on N-stage is described, followed by innate problems with the guidelines, and why pathologists may have difficulties in assessing lymph node metastases uniformly. Finally, clinical significance of isolated tumor cells, micrometastasis, and macrometastasis is described by reviewing historical retrospective data and significant prospective clinical trials.
topic Sentinel lymph node
N-stage
Isolated tumor cells
Micrometastasis
Macrometastasis
url http://www.jpatholtm.org/upload/pdf/jptm-2015-11-23.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT sophiakapple sentinellymphnodeinbreastcancerreviewarticlefromapathologistspointofview
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