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Spots Global Cancer Trial Database for Sentinel Lymph Node Detection in Early Cervical Cancer

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Trial Identification

Brief Title: Sentinel Lymph Node Detection in Early Cervical Cancer

Official Title: Sentinel Lymph Node Detection in Early Cervical Cancer

Study ID: NCT02543775

Conditions

Cervical Cancer

Study Description

Brief Summary: The primary objective of this study is to determine the feasibility of detecting the sentinel lymph node (SLN) in patients with early invasive cervical cancer using a combined radioisotope and blue dye technique. The investigators hypothesize that the sentinel lymph node (first node draining the tumour/cervix) for early stage cervical cancer represents the status of the regional lymph node basin (pelvic lymph nodes) and identification of a negative SLN would negate the need for complete pelvic lymphadenectomy.

Detailed Description: Cancers of the cervix that are small and appear to be contained in the cervix (early stage) have up to 20 percent chance of having pelvic lymph nodes involved. The standard therapy is removal of the uterus and cervix (radical hysterectomy) and removal of all pelvic lymph nodes for all women with early stage cervical cancer. This procedure can be associated with significant intraoperative and postoperative complications including increased risk of damage to blood vessels and nerves in the pelvic region (leading to bladder, bowel and sexual dysfunction) as well as lymphedema (swelling, particularly in the legs) associated with significant pelvic lymph tissue removal. The objective of this study is to find a way to accurately identify the first lymph node that drains the tumour/cervix (SLN). If this SLN is correctly identified, and it's status (positive or negative for malignancy) is representative of the entire lymph node basin, a complete node dissection could be avoided. This could benefit many women with early stage cervical cancer, as a minority actually have evidence of disease in the nodes after surgery (between 5-20%) and limited lymph node sampling could prevent the associated complications of a full pelvic lymph node dissection. This is a prospective cohort study. The population to be studied is patients with newly diagnosed early stage cervical cancer undergoing primary surgical intervention including radical hysterectomy and bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy. On the morning of surgery, preoperative injection of a radiolabeled colloid will be performed in the Nuclear Medicine Department followed by SPECT/CT to visualize the radiolabelled dye. Patients will then be taken to the operating room for their planned procedure. After initiation of general anesthesia, blue dye will be injected into the patient's cervix. The surgery will proceed and all lymph nodes that are "blue" and/or "hot" will be removed surgically, their anatomic location and laterality documented and sent for frozen section intraoperatively. The radical hysterectomy or radical trachelectomy and complete systematic bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy will then be performed. The SLN status reported by the pathologist based on the frozen section will be compared to the status of the other nodes removed after complete lymphadenectomy and reported in the final pathology report (after formalin fixation and paraffin embedding). All data on these patients will be prospectively collected. This protocol will determine the feasibility of SLN mapping in women with early stage cervical cancer. The primary outcomes will be to measure the rate of detection of SLN using the combination of radiolabelled and blue dye (unilateral and bilateral detection rates will be reported) as well as the sensitivity and specificity of this technique, based on assessing how well the intraoperative reading of SLN frozen section corresponds with the final pathology lymph node status after examining all lymph nodes removed by complete pelvic lymphadenectomy. In addition, the investigators will assess the usefulness of preoperative SPECT/CT in identifying SLN and whether this modality accurately identifies the lymph node basin containing SLN compared to conventional lymphoscintigram.

Eligibility

Minimum Age: 18 Years

Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT

Sex: FEMALE

Healthy Volunteers: No

Locations

Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Contact Details

Name: Sarah Ferguson, MD

Affiliation: Princess Margaret Hospital, Canada

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Useful links and downloads for this trial

Clinicaltrials.gov

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