Sentinel lymph node in cervical cancer: a literature review.

2020 
INTRODUCTION Sentinel lymph node detection is a surgical procedure that allow to avoid systematic lymphadenectomy in those tumor in early stage where lymph node spread is not sure. If the Sentinel lymph node is not involved by tumour in 98-99% of case other lymph nodes are clean. The reason why less radical surgery is chosen is linked to the lower post-operative morbidity rate, the risk of lower limb lymphedema decreases. The aim of this review is to summarize what is the state of art of using the Sentinel Lymphnode Dissection (SLD) technique and what are the future goals to improve the safety and the reliability. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION We have conducted a review of the literature of the past 10 years to understand the attitudes of oncologist gynecologists in the world to the conservative treatment of cervical cancer. We only selected articles from 2010 onwards, which meet the inclusion criteria. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS The detection rate varies from 83% to 100%. The bilateral detection rate, on the other hand, varies from% to 100%. The false negative rate ranges from 4% to 12%. Sensitivity varies from 20.7% (considering the frozen section) to 100%. CONCLUSIONS Indocyanine green is the most reliable and performing tracer for the search of the sentinel lymph node; that the false intraoperative negative rate is too high to be sure not to subject the patient to an incorrect therapeutic procedure; data concerning the safety and survival of conservative lymphadenectomy (SLND) compared to systematic lymphadenectomy are still lacking in the literature and therefore we are awaiting the results of the two ongoing randomized clinical trials that will allow us to have more significant scientific data.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    38
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []