Diagnostic performance of one-step nucleic acid amplification for intraoperative sentinel node metastasis detection in breast cancer patients.

Fiche publication


Date publication

mai 2012

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr ARNOULD Laurent, Dr LEROUX Agnès


Tous les auteurs :
Le Frere-Belda MA, Bats AS, Gillaizeau F, Poulet B, Clough KB, Nos C, Peoc'h M, Seffert P, Bouteille C, Leroux A, Guillemin F, Blanc-Fournier C, Crouet H, Arnould L, Cuisenier J, Penault-Llorca F, Gimbergues P, Jacquemier J, Houvenaeghel G, Chatellier G, Lecuru F

Résumé

The purpose of this prospective multicenter study was to assess one-step nucleic acid amplification (OSNA) for intraoperative sentinel lymph node (SLN) metastasis detection in breast cancer patients, using final histology as the reference standard. OSNA results were also compared to intraoperative histology SLN evaluation and to standard clinicopathological risk markers. For this study, fresh SLNs were cut in four blocks, and alternate blocks were used for OSNA and histology. CK19 mRNA copy number was categorized as strongly positive, positive or negative. Positive histology was defined as presence of macrometastasis or micrometastasis. When discrepancies occurred, the entire SLNs were subjected to histological studies and the node lysates to additional molecular studies. Five hundred three SLN samples from 233 patients were studied. Mean time to evaluate two SLNs was 40 min. Sensitivity per patient was 91.4% (95% CI, 76.9-98.2%), specificity 93.3% (95% CI, 88.6-96.6%), positive likelihood ratio 13.7 and negative likelihood ratio 0.1. Sensitivity was 63.6% for frozen sections and 47.1% for touch imprint cytology. Both methods were 100% specific. Positive histology and positive OSNA were significantly associated with highest clinical stage, N1 status and vascular invasion; and OSNA results correlated with HER2/neu status and benefited patients with negative histology. These findings show that OSNA assay can allow detection of SLN metastasis in breast cancer patients intraoperatively with a good sensitivity, thus minimizing the need for second surgeries for axillary lymph node detection.

Référence

Int J Cancer. 2012 May 15;130(10):2377-86