Abstract
We reviewed data from 160 consecutive patients (89 M/71 F; 53.5 [range, 9–88] years) who had under-gone lymphoscintigraphy and sentinel lymph node biopsy (SNB) in our hospital for histologically proven cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM) (located on the upper limb: 33; lower limb: 57; trunk: 44; and head and neck: 26 patients), with a Breslow index > 1 mm and without clinical or radiologic evidence of metastatic spread. Colloidal 99mTc-rhenium sulfide (36–76 MBq) was injected intradermally in the four quadrants around the tumorectomy scar, followed by dynamic acquisition and static imaging. SN(s) were identified in 157 patients (overall identification rate, 98%). Fast (< 20 minutes), intermediate (20–30 minutes), or slow (> 30 minutes) lymphatic drainage was observed, respectively, in 122 (78%), 24 (15%), or 11 (7%) cases. Overall malignancy rate was 15%, respectively found in 19 (16%), 2 (8%), and 2 (18 %) patients with fast, intermediate, or slow drainage. No statistical difference between SN-positivity rates of patients with fast (19/122 = 16%) versus intermediate or slow drainage (4/35 = 11.4%) was observed (p = 0.69). Therefore, lymphoscintigraphic SN appearance time in CMM patients is unable both to predict SN metastasis and spare them from undergoing SN excision.
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