Litcius/Paper detail

Omitting axillary staging in selected patients: Rationale of Choosing Wisely in breast cancer treatment

Sara Grossi, Julie Le, Ava Armani

2023Surgery18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Axillary surgery for breast cancer has continually evolved, with sentinel lymph node biopsy for clinically node-negative women with invasive breast cancer having long replaced axillary lymph node dissection. The information obtained from axillary staging has been important in providing prognostic information and guiding adjuvant treatment recommendations. However, recent studies suggest that sentinel lymph node biopsy should be omitted in select low-risk patients whose axillary surgery provides minimal prognostic value. This was highlighted by the Society of Surgical Oncology Choosing Wisely Guidelines, advocating against routine axillary staging in older women with early-stage hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. Since the guideline release, ongoing research has continued to identify the subset of low-risk patients who would benefit from the omission of axillary staging and improve adherence to Choosing Wisely to prevent overtreatment in older people.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineBreast cancerSentinel lymph nodeGuidelineBiopsyAxillary Lymph Node DissectionAxillary lymph nodesAxillaSentinel nodeStage (stratigraphy)Lymph nodeAxillary DissectionGeneral surgeryOncologyCancerSurgeryRadiologyInternal medicinePathologyBiologyPaleontologyBreast Cancer Treatment StudiesCancer Risks and FactorsBreast Implant and Reconstruction