Journal of Clinical Oncology, volume 43, issue 7, pages 810-820

Nodal Burden and Oncologic Outcomes in Patients With Residual Isolated Tumor Cells After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy (ypN0i+): The OPBC-05/ICARO Study

Giacomo Montagna 1
Alison Laws 2
Massimo Ferrucci 3
Mary M. Mrdutt 4
Susie X. Sun 5
S. Bademler 6
Hakan Balbaloglu 7
Nora Balint-Lahat 8, 9
Maggie Banys-Paluchowski 10
Andrea V. Barrio 1
John Benson 11
Nuran Bese 12
Judy C. Boughey 4
Marissa K. Srour 13
Emilia J. Diego 14
Claire Eden 15
Ruth S. Eller 16, 17
Maite Goldschmidt 16, 17
Callie Hlavin 14
Martin Heidinger 16, 17
Justyna Jelinska 18
Güldeniz Karadeniz Cakmak 7
Susan B. Kesmodel 19
Tari A. King 2
Henry M. Kuerer 5
Julie Loesch 16, 17
Francesco Milardi 3
Dawid Murawa 18
Tracy-Ann Moo 1
Tehillah S Menes 8, 9
Daniele Passeri 3
Jessica Pastoriza 20
Andraz Perhavec 21
Nina Pislar 21
Natália Polidorio 1
Avina Rami 2
Jai Min Ryu 22
Alexandra Schulz 16, 23
Varadan Sevilimedu 24
Mustafa Ugurlu 25
Cihan Uras 12
Annemiek K. E. van Hemert 26
Stephanie M. Wong 27
Tae-Kyung Yoo 28
Jennifer Q Zhang 29
Hasan Karanlik 6
Neslihan Cabioğlu 30
Marie-Jeanne T. F. D. Vrancken Peeters 31
Monica Morrow 1
Elisabeth A. Kappos 16, 17
Show full list: 50 authors
12
 
Research Institute of Senology Acibadem, Istanbul, Turkey
13
 
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA
20
 
Breast Surgery Division, Department of Surgery, Montefiore Medical Center, Montefiore Einstein Center for Cancer Care, New York, NY
26
 
Department of Surgery, Stichting HET Netherlands Kanker Instituut-Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-03-01
scimago Q1
SJR10.639
CiteScore41.2
Impact factor42.1
ISSN0732183X, 15277755
PubMed ID:  39509672
Abstract
PURPOSE

The nodal burden of patients with residual isolated tumor cells (ITCs) in the sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs) after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) (ypN0i+) is unknown, and axillary management is not standardized. We investigated rates of additional positive lymph nodes (LNs) at axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) and oncologic outcomes in patients with ypN0i+ treated with and without ALND.

METHODS

The Oncoplastic Breast Consortium-05/ICARO cohort study (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT06464341 ) retrospectively analyzed data from patients with stage I to III breast cancer with ITCs in SLNs after NAC from 62 centers in 18 countries. The primary end point was the 3-year rate of any axillary recurrence. The rate of any invasive recurrence was the secondary end point.

RESULTS

In total, 583 patients were included, of whom 182 (31%) had completion ALND and 401 (69%) did not. The median age was 48 years. Most patients (74%) were clinically node-positive at diagnosis and 41% had hormone receptor–positive/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2–negative tumors. The mean number of SLNs with ITCs was 1.2. Patients treated with ALND were more likely to present with cN2/3 disease (17% v 7%, P < .001), have ITCs detected on frozen section (62% v 8%, P < .001), have lymphovascular invasion (38% v 24%, P < .001), and receive adjuvant chest wall (89% v 78%, P = .024) and nodal radiation (82% v 75%, P = .038). Additional positive nodes were found at ALND in 30% of patients, but only 5% had macrometastases. The 3-year rates of any axillary and any invasive recurrence were 2% (95% CI, 0.95 to 3.6) and 11% (95% CI, 8 to 14), respectively, with no statistical difference by type of axillary surgery.

CONCLUSION

The nodal burden in patients with ypN0(i+) was low, and axillary recurrence after ALND omission was rare in patients selected for this approach. These results do not support routine ALND in all patients with ypN0(i+).

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