Breast Cancer Lymphedema Clinical Trial
Official title:
Axillary Reverse Mapping (ARM). Identification of the Arm Lymphatic Pathways in Breast Cancer Surgery to Prevent Breast Cancer Related Lymphedema (BCRL): a Randomized Clinical Trial.
Breast cancer related lymphedema (BCRL) is a debilitating and distressing condition affecting
approximately one out of five breast cancer survivors. BCRL is a chronic swelling of the
upper arm following axillary lymph nodes dissection, and it is associated to a significant
functional, psychological and social morbidity, with an heavy impact on life quality. Several
studies reported BCRL incidence between 6.7% and 62.5% for different population cohorts.
Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) reported that sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) when
compared with axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) leads to a significant reduction in
postoperative complications. However, the advent of SLNB does not solve the problem of BCRL
with a concrete chance to develop a lymphedema after single SLNB around 7%. Health care cost
of BCRL rehabilitative treatment is not available in literature yet. Few studies considered
incidence, risk factors and treatment costs of BCRL among working-age women after breast
cancer treatment, reporting that BCRL population had significantly higher rehabilitative
medical costs ($14,877 to $23,167) with twice as much risk to develop BCRL complications,
such as lymphangitis or cellulitis when compared to "BCRL free" population (OR = 2.02, P =
.009).
Axillary reverse mapping (ARM) procedure claims to map and preserve arm lymphatic drainage
during ALND and/or during SLNB, reducing BCRL development. ARM is developed as result of
assumption that arm's lymphatic pathway is not involved by metastatic tumor cells of the
primary breast cancer. However, when the arm lymph node correspond to the SLN it should be
removed for correct tumor staging, thus a lymphatic drainage disruption onset will be
expected with BCRL risk increase.
During the ARM procedure, a fluorescence imaging technique (photodynamic procedure) is useful
for detecting lymphatic drainage of the upper limb and it allows in differentiating the
fluorescent ARM node from the SLN identified by the radioguided technique (99mTC-Nanocoll).
The investigators will conduct a randomized clinical trial (RCT) at the S. Anna University
Hospital of Ferrara (Italy) on consecutive patients undergoing SLNB for breast cancer and
subsequent ALND in case of SLN metastases. Eligible patients for radioguided sentinel lymph
node biopsy (rSLNB) will be randomly divided in two groups: 1) experimental group in which
patients undergoing rSLNB and ARM photodynamic procedure; and, in case of SLN metastases,
subsequent ALND with ARM node preservation; 2) control group in which patients undergoing
rSLNB and ARM photodynamic procedure; and, in case of SLN metastases, subsequent ALND with
ARM node removal.
Consent procedure
Patients will be visited in the outpatient clinic by one of the treating surgeon, who will
approach the subject and explain the study. If the patient is interested in participating,
further details will be provided and consent will be obtained.
Experimental design
Step 1
Patients enrolled in both groups will be subjected to rSLNB associated to ARM photodynamic
procedure.
Radioguided SLNB technique:
The day before surgery, four peri-areolar subcutaneous injections of Tc-99m Nanocoll® will be
performed for an overall volume of 0.4 ml (standard activity of 74 MBq). Pre-operative
imaging of SLN consists of an anterior and lateral static acquisition, generally performed
between 1 and 5 hours post-injection (max. 18 hours), by means of a double head gammacamera
(Siemens, ECAM). The gamma camera energy selection peak is centered on the 140 KeV of 99mTc
(with a window of ± 10%), and the use of high-resolution collimators and of a 256x256
acquisition matrix. Acquisition time varies between 2 and 8 minutes. Cutaneous projection of
SLN will be marked with a skin-marking pen. The day of surgery, after intraoperative routine
prep and drape, a handheld gamma probe (EuroProbe III, EURORAD, Chennevières-sur-Marne,
France) will be used to localize radioactivity before skin incision and during axillary
dissection to identify SLN, that is defined by counts >10% of background.
ARM photodynamic procedure:
The day of surgery, 15 minutes before surgical incision, patients will be subjected to
injection of 1 ml of ICG (5mg/ml) in the upper forearm and during SLNB we will perform an
evaluation of lymphatic arm pathways with fluorescence (IC-Flow Diagnostic Green, SEDA
S.p.a., Milano, Italy). If a crossover between SLN of the breast and the arm's lymph node
will be find, the ARM lymph node identified by the photodynamic technique will be excised for
pathological evaluation.
Step 2
Patients with tumor positive SLN, eligible for ALND, will undergo to preoperative arm
lymphoscintigraphy in order to asses possible changes in lymphatic drainage pathways of the
arm after rSLNB.
The day before ALND, an injection of a volume of 0.4 ml of Tc-99m Nanocoll® in each hand will
be performed, fractioned in all interdigital space. The subsequent scintigraphic planar
acquisition is performed using a double head gamma-camera (Siemens, Ecam) according the
following protocol:
- 5 minutes post injection: imaging acquisition on hands and forearms positioned over
collimator with a marker near right arm;
- 10 minutes post injection :anterior acquisition with gamma camera head 1 on elbows and
shoulders;
- 15 minutes post injection : anterior acquisition on both axilla and thorax using cobalt
wires markers drawing cranium profile;
- 20 minutes post injection :marking with skin-marking pen of skin projection of most
radioactive axillary nodes;
- 120/180 minutes post injection : acquisition in the same position for checking of
possible number and/or site changes of nodes marked before.
Step 3
Experimental group:
In case of SLN metastases, during radical ALND (I, II,III levels of Berg), the ARM lymph node
identified with both radioguided and photodynamic methods will be isolated from the other
axillary lymph nodes and preserved. Photodynamic method will also allow us to visualize the
lymphatic drainage of the arm that will be preserved.
Control group:
In case of SLN metastases, during radical ALND (I, II,III levels of Berg), the ARM lymph node
identified with both radioguided and photodynamic method will be isolated from the other
axillary lymph nodes and removed.
Step 4
The post-operative follow up will be conducted in inpatient setting and after discharge in
outpatient setting (surveillance for early and delayed surgical complications). All patients
will be clinically evaluated at 10, 30, 60, and 180 days after surgery and undergoing
bilateral arms lymphoscintigraphy at 60 days after surgery to determine possible
lymphoscintigraphic changes underlying a subclinical BCRL. Clinically follow-up will include
the clinical presentation (pain, integumentary abnormalities, paresthesia, hypoesthesia,
neuro-vascular deficits), measurement of 7 records [diameters of the upper limb (hand, wrist,
15 cm and 10 cm distally to olecranon, elbow (olecranon), 10 cm and 15 cm proximally to
olecranon)] and final conversion into volumes. In case of BCRL diagnosis patients will be
addressed to rehabilitative center for therapy.
Statistical analysis
A prospective analysis will be obtained from database in which patients data will be
collected, with details of the patients and tumors characteristics, lymphatic drainage of the
upper extremity, intra- and post-operative outcome, and follow up. The power analysis, based
on preliminary results, reports that 150 women in each group are required to achieve a power
of 0.9 and to detect a significant difference (p<0.05). Data will be expressed as mean ±
standard deviation or median (interquartile range - IQR 25-75) according to the distribution.
The Shapiro-Wilk test will be used to assess the assumption of normality. Categorical data
will be presented as number (%). Data will be analyzed using the Chi-square test to compare
percentages, t-Student test will be used to compare the means and Mann-Whitney test to
compare non parametric data. Logistic regression analysis will be employed to construct a
model predicting BCRL using factors regarding the patient [age, gender, BMI, American Society
of Anesthesiology (ASA) classification], the tumor (size, stage, bio-molecular
characteristics ), crossover, type of intervention (preservation of ARM lymph node vs.
dissection), and post-operative treatment (chemotherapy, radiotherapy). Significance will be
considered for values of p<0.05. Statistical analysis will be performed with IBM SPSS
Statistics for Windows, Version 24.0 (IBM Corp. Armonk, NY: IBM Corp.).
;
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