Background: Breast cancer is the most common malignancy in women, and sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy is essential for accurate nodal staging while avoiding unnecessary axillary dissection. Aim: This study aimed to compare SLN detection rates between two dual-tracer techniques: indocyanine green plus patent blue (ICG + PB) and technetium-99m plus patent blue (99mTc + PB), and to identify factors associated with detection failure for each tracer. Methods: All clinically node-negative breast cancer patients undergoing SLN biopsy between January 2014 and December 2024 were retrospectively evaluated. SLN detection was considered successful when at least one node was identified intraoperatively and confirmed histologically. Multivariate analysis assessed clinical and tumor-related predictors of failure. Results: A total of 269 procedures (258 patients) were analyzed, including 152 ICG + PB and 117 99mTc + PB procedures. Detection rates were comparable between groups (95.4% vs. 94.9%, p = 0.96), with no significant differences in the number of SLNs retrieved or nodal positivity. Multivariate analysis identified increasing patient age as the only independent predictor of PB failure, while no variables were associated with ICG failure. Tumor location in the upper-inner quadrant was the sole predictor of 99mTc failure. Conclusions: ICG + PB and 99mTc + PB provide equivalent and high SLN detection rates. ICG appears to be a robust, radiation-free alternative with no identifiable predictors of failure, supporting its role as an effective mapping strategy, particularly in centers aiming to optimize workflow and patient safety, despite the limited available data on its efficacy.
Hfaiedh et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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