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Contralateral lymph node metastases in patients with vulvar cancer and unilateral sentinel lymph node metastases
Author(s) -
Ignatov Tanja,
Gaßner Johannes,
Bozukova Mihaela,
Ivros Stylianos,
Mészáros József,
Ortmann Olaf,
Eggemann Holm,
Ignatov Atanas
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acta obstetricia et gynecologica scandinavica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.401
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1600-0412
pISSN - 0001-6349
DOI - 10.1111/aogs.14157
Subject(s) - medicine , vulvar cancer , sentinel lymph node , lymphadenectomy , lymph , lymph node , surgery , biopsy , radiology , cancer , dissection (medical) , breast cancer , pathology
The risk of contralateral lymph node metastases following unilateral sentinel lymph node (SLN) metastases in patients with vulvar cancer(s) remains to be systematically assessed. Material and methods We performed a multicenter, retrospective registry‐based study of 476 patients with vulvar cancer. The primary outcome measure was the rate of contralateral non‐SLN metastases in the case of positive unilateral SLN. Results Out of 476 patients with primary vulvar cancer, 202 received SLN biopsy: 58 unilateral and 144 bilateral. Out of 66 patients with unilateral metastatic SLN, 62 (93.9%) received contralateral lymphadenectomy—18 after unilateral and 44 after bilateral SLN biopsy. In the study group, 132 SLN were assessed with a median number of 2 (range 1–4) per patient and 76 of these were positive. Lymph node‐positivity was associated with advanced tumor stage, as well as lymph and vascular space invasion. In the group of patients with bilateral inguino‐femoral lymphadenectomy, 1004 lymph nodes were resected with a median number of 15 (range 10–29) per patient. After full dissection of the inguino‐femoral lymph nodes, no contralateral non‐SLN metastases were found. Conclusions The risk of contralateral non‐SLN metastases in patients with unilateral SLN metastases was low. Therefore, the impact of contralateral lymphadenectomy on patient survival should be investigated in further studies.

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