[Abstract] [Full Text PDF] (in Japanese / 571KB) [Members Only And Two Factor Auth.]

J.Jpn. Surg. Soc.. 93(11): 1427-1432, 1992


Original article

A ROLE OF INTERPECTORAL (ROTTER'S) LYMPH NODE DISSECTION IN MODIFIED RADICAL MASTECTOMY FOR BREAST CANCER

1) Department of Surgery, Niigata Prefectural Central Hospital, Niigata, Japan
2) Kodama Breast Clinic, Kyoto, Japan

Nobuyasu Yamasaki1), Hiroshi Kodama2)

To study the influence of interpectoral lymph node (IPN)dissection on the prognosis of patients who underwent modified radical mastectomy, IPN was carefully dissected and studied pathologically on 168 cases of our breast cancer patients operated with modified radical mastectomy.
There were 1.2 lymph nodes on an average in the interpectoral region, and they were almost 1ー2mm in diameter. IPN metastases were found in 10 cases.(Tis:0%, Stage I:4.9%, Stage ll:5.7%, Stage III: 13%).Tumors located in outer quadrant in almost all of these cases. Positive IPN were found in 6(16%)of n1α group, 1(10%)of n1β group, and in 3(50%)of n2 group. All these 3 cases of n2 died of distant metastasis and local recurrence. Two(1.7%)of axillary node(1a, 1b)negative patients had microinvolvement of cancer only in IPN, and are currently disease-free.
These data suggest that IPN metastasis may occur even in the early breast cancer patients, and that may be controllable by lymph node excision. Therefore, routine and careful dissection of IPN through wide opening of sulcus interpectoralis is necessary for modified radical mastectomy and even for breast preserving operation.


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