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Brief Title: Delayed Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy in Ductal Cancer in Situ
Official Title: Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy in Ductal Cancer in Situ or Unclear Lesions of the Breast and How to Not do it. An Open-label, Phase 3, Randomised Controlled Trial. (SentiNot 2.0).
Study ID: NCT04722692
Brief Summary: The trial aims to investigate the use of superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) nanoparticles as a tracer for delayed sentinel lymph node dissection (d-SLND) in patients where upfront axillary surgery (SLND) is oncologically deemed unnecessary and should be avoided. This includes but is not limited to patients with a preoperative diagnosis of ductal cancer in situ of the breast (DCIS), an unclear BIRADS 4-5 planned for diagnostic excision or women planned for risk reducing mastectomy. SPIO is injected in the primary operation, and should final specimen pathology demonstrate invasive breast cancer, only then is an operation in the axilla (d-SLND) performed.
Detailed Description: The SentiNot 2.0 protocol aims to elucidate the effectivity and accuracy of the delayed sentinel lymph node dissection concept (dSLND) when upfront SLND is considered unnecessary, such as in the setting of a preoperative diagnosis of DCIS, in cases of unclear BIRADS 4 or 5 lesions that are planned for diagnostic excisional biopsy or in selected cases of risk reducing mastectomy. Acknowledging the large variance of practice in this setting, the study aims to address pragmatism to allow for inclusion. For this reason, the trial is designed separately and independently for mastectomy and breast conserving surgery, so that participating sites can recruit as fitting in their practice. In patients included in the SentiNot 2.0 trial, SPIO (MagTrace,2.0 ml) is injected up to 24 hours preoperatively or perioperatively during primary breast surgery on patients with a preoperative diagnosis of DCIS (or suspicious lesions with no clear diagnosis of invasive cancer but, considered for SLND). The SPIO is injected close to the lesion. If injected less than 24 hours before the operation, a 5 minute massage should be performed. Planned breast surgery is performed. The transcutaneous magnetic counts by SentiMag in the axilla is measured at the end of the breast procedure, so as to allow for confirmation that SLND may be identified. Thus,the SLN is consequently marked with SPIO, but not excised. In this manner, women that have pure DCIS on final histopathological examination have avoided unnecessary upfront SLND. If there is underlying invasive breast cancer on final histopathological examination, SLND will be performed at a second operation (d-SLND). A preoperative injection of radioisotope (RI) RI will be added to maximize the chance to detect the SLN. SLND will start with a registration of the magnetic and isotope signal in the axilla, and the incision will be placed in relation to the signal. In patients that have undergone mastectomy, tracers are to be injected intracutaneously in the lateral part of the mastectomy scar. The routine use of blue dye (BD) is strongly advised, but is not compulsory. However, if no transcutaneous signal for SPIO and RI is measured in the axilla pre-incision, an injection of BD according local routines will be administered. Subsequently, SLND will be performed. Patients with upgrade to invasive cancer will undergo SLND, but will be randomized with an allocation ratio of 1:1 to SentiMag first or Radioactive probe first. This will mandate the "principal modality" to perform SLND. Every step of the procedure will be controlled; if the principal modality fails, then the surgeon will use the "secondary". If the principal modality succeeds, the secondary will be registered and documented. The procedure will be divided to the following steps: * Transcutaneous axillary signal detection * Subcutaneous axillary detection, after the incision has been performed. * In situ SLN identification. * SLN retrieval ex vivo. * Residual axillary signal ("Background counts"). If a SLND is successfully completed with the primary modality and no residual axillary signal is detected, before completing the procedure, the secondary modality will be undertaken to allow for the detection of "discordance". Principle modalities maybe either RI or SPIO. If BD is used, dyed lymphatics should be ignored until failure with both modalities has been reached. The success of each modality, principal and secondary, will be controlled per step. If the surgeon documents principle modality failure for a given step, this is to be documented. The intention-to-treat principle will apply, but if there is failure of the modality randomized as principle, then the per-protocol-analysis principle will apply. All SLNs (magnetic, brown, radioactive, blue) will be removed. Palpable nodes may be removed according to surgeon discretion, but should be reported as such. Total technique failure has to be discussed with the patient in advance, and a plan with patient consent consisting of no-surgery, sampling, axillary dissection or treatment according to intraoperative decision has to be available. If no SLN is found, the procedure performed (axillary clearance, sampling. etc) should be discussed in advance with the patient. The SLN may be sent for frozen section in order to avoid a third operation, if SLN metastases are present. Standard of care patients (SLND performed upfront for diagnoses included in the inclusion criteria or patients going to l-SLND without SPIO) may also be enrolled in the study prospectively as a control arm.Additionally, patient preference will be tolerated and results will be reported for study secondary and other pre-specified endpoints. Patients in the control group has to be informed that their un-identified data will be used as a comparison and, an oral consent has to be given before surgery regardless whether SLND is planned or not. This will allow for controlled real world data from a prospective control arm in fashion of a cohort.
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers: No
Baylor College Of Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States
The University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen Hospital, Hong Kong, , Hong Kong
Falun Lasarett, Falun, Dalarna, Sweden
Växjö County Hospital, Växjö, Kronoberg, Sweden
Skåne University Hospital, Lund, Skåne, Sweden
Västmanland County Hospital, Västerås, Västmanland, Sweden
Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Gothenburg, Västra Götaland, Sweden
Uppsala University Hospital, Uppsala, , Sweden
Linköping University Hospital, Linköping, Östra Götaland, Sweden
Name: Andreas Karakatsanis, PhD
Affiliation: Uppsala University
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR