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Preoperative ultrasonographic identification of the sentinel lymph node in patients with malignant melanoma

✍ Scribed by Birgit Kahle; Johannes Hoffend; Jörg Wacker; Wolfgang Hartschuh


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
285 KB
Volume
97
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-543X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

BACKGROUND

Dissection of the “sentinel lymph node” (SLN) as identified by lymphoscintigraphy is becoming increasingly important in the treatment of patients with malignant melanoma. The purpose of the current study was to determine whether the SLN also could be identified by ultrasound.

METHODS

Sixty‐seven patients with malignant melanoma (40 females and 27 males, with an average age of 48.8 years) in whom extirpation of the SLN was indicated underwent ultrasonography of the regional lymph nodes prior to preoperative lymphoscintigraphy. The location of the melanoma was the legs in 30 patients, the arms in 14 patients, and the trunk in 23 patients. During regional ultrasonography, the location of the lymph nodes that differed in the cortex/medulla ratio from the surrounding lymph nodes was marked on the skin corresponding to the planes of insonation (M1) when the probe was held vertically to the skin surface. After lymphoscintigraphy using technetium‐99m, the position of a gamma probe at which the highest count rate vertical to the skin surface was recorded also was marked (M2).

RESULTS

In the inguinal region, the agreement between M1 and M2 was found to be 100% (40 of 40 SLNs) and was 72.5% in the axilla (29 of 40 SLNs). In patients with melanomas located on the leg, the location of M1 and M2 agreed in 97% of cases (36 of 37 lymph nodes in 30 patients); in patients with melanomas located on the arms, the agreement was 76% (13 of 17 lymph nodes in 14 patients) and in patients with melanomas located on the trunk, the agreement was 75% (21 of 28 lymph nodes in 23 patients). The position documented by ultrasound relative to the neighboring structures of the SLN was confirmed intraoperatively in all cases.

CONCLUSIONS

The results of the current study indicate that the SLN in patients with melanoma located on the limbs, especially the legs, are characterized by a specific sonomorphologic pattern. Preoperative sonography might constitute an important addition to lymphoscintigraphy in the planning of SLN biopsy. Cancer 2003;97:1947–54. © 2003 American Cancer Society.

DOI 10.1002/cncr.11261


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