Skip to main content
Top
Published in: Breast Cancer Research and Treatment 2/2020

01-04-2020 | Breast Cancer | Clinical Trial

Neoadjuvant therapy and sentinel lymph node biopsy in HER2-positive breast cancer patients: results from the PEONY trial

Authors: Xiao Sun, Xue-Er Wang, Zhao-Peng Zhang, Zhi-Qiang Shi, Bin-Bin Cong, Yong-Sheng Wang, Zhi-Min Shao

Published in: Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | Issue 2/2020

Login to get access

Abstract

Objective

The aim of the study is to evaluate the optimal timing of sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) in patients with clinical negative axillary lymph nodes (ALNs) before neoadjuvant therapy (NAT) and the feasibility of SLNB substituting for ALN dissection in patients with positive ALNs who convert to node negative, for HER2-positive disease.

Methods

Patients receiving SLNB with dual tracer mapping in the PEONY trial were analyzed.

Results

For 80 patients with clinical negative ALNs, the node negative rate by pathology after NAT was 83.8%. SLNB was performed after NAT in 71 patients. The identification rate of sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) was 100%. For patients with positive ALNs before NAT, the axillary pathologic complete response rate in the dual HER2 blockade arm was significantly higher than that in the single blockade arm (p = 0.002). SLNB was performed in 71 patients. The identification rate was 100% and the false-negative rate was 17.2%. The false-negative rates were 33.3%, 14.3%, and 0 when 1, 2, and more than 2 SLNs were detected. There was no false-negative case when more than 1 SLN and the clipped nodes were removed simultaneously.

Conclusions

For clinical ALN negative patients, HER2-positive subtype is found to have high node negative rate by pathology and it is recommended to undergo SLNB after NAT. For patients with positive ALNs who convert to negative, the false-negative rate is high. Dual tracer mapping, more than 2 SLNs detected, more than 1 SLN identified plus the clips placed are the guarantees for lower false-negative rate.
Literature
9.
go back to reference Grasishar WJ, Anderson BO, Balassanian R et al (2017) Breast Cancer, Version 3.2017 featured updates to the NCCN Guidelines. National Comprehensive Cancer Network. https://www.NCCN.org. Accessed 10 Nov 2017 Grasishar WJ, Anderson BO, Balassanian R et al (2017) Breast Cancer, Version 3.2017 featured updates to the NCCN Guidelines. National Comprehensive Cancer Network. https://​www.​NCCN.​org. Accessed 10 Nov 2017
10.
go back to reference Grasishar WJ, Anderson BO, Balassanian R et al (2020) Breast Cancer, Version 1.2020 featured updates to the NCCN Guidelines. National Comprehensive Cancer Network. https://www.NCCN.org. Accessed 15 Jan 2020 Grasishar WJ, Anderson BO, Balassanian R et al (2020) Breast Cancer, Version 1.2020 featured updates to the NCCN Guidelines. National Comprehensive Cancer Network. https://​www.​NCCN.​org. Accessed 15 Jan 2020
21.
23.
go back to reference Nason KS, Anderson BO, Byrd DR et al (2000) Increased false negative sentinel node biopsy rates after preoperative chemotherapy for invasive breast carcinoma. Cancer 89:2187–2194CrossRefPubMed Nason KS, Anderson BO, Byrd DR et al (2000) Increased false negative sentinel node biopsy rates after preoperative chemotherapy for invasive breast carcinoma. Cancer 89:2187–2194CrossRefPubMed
Metadata
Title
Neoadjuvant therapy and sentinel lymph node biopsy in HER2-positive breast cancer patients: results from the PEONY trial
Authors
Xiao Sun
Xue-Er Wang
Zhao-Peng Zhang
Zhi-Qiang Shi
Bin-Bin Cong
Yong-Sheng Wang
Zhi-Min Shao
Publication date
01-04-2020
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment / Issue 2/2020
Print ISSN: 0167-6806
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7217
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10549-020-05559-9

Other articles of this Issue 2/2020

Breast Cancer Research and Treatment 2/2020 Go to the issue
Webinar | 19-02-2024 | 17:30 (CET)

Keynote webinar | Spotlight on antibody–drug conjugates in cancer

Antibody–drug conjugates (ADCs) are novel agents that have shown promise across multiple tumor types. Explore the current landscape of ADCs in breast and lung cancer with our experts, and gain insights into the mechanism of action, key clinical trials data, existing challenges, and future directions.

Dr. Véronique Diéras
Prof. Fabrice Barlesi
Developed by: Springer Medicine