Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02739425

The Efficacy of Sentimag in Detection of Sentinel Node Biopsy

SMART Study: Sentimag Along With Routine Technique in Detection of Sentinel Node Biopsy

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
104 (actual)
Sponsor
The Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of this study is to evaluate the Sentimag/Sienna+ System (Sentimag®) in clinical routine practice. On the one hand this allows evaluation of the equivalence of the two techniques. On the other hand this ensures that patients do not experience any possible disadvantages by participating. The hypothesis behind this evaluation is that Sentimag is as efficient as conventional sentinel node mapping. The programme will compare the Sentimag® with the conventional sentinel lymph node detection with radioactive tracer combined with blue dye (in centres using the combined technique) and thereby determine whether the new technique is equivalent to the standard technique for SLNB.

Detailed description

Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is now the standard technique used in breast cancer patients with a clinically and radiologically negative axilla. SLNB for breast cancer was introduced in the 1990s3 and it significantly reduces the morbidity associated with axillary node dissection (ALND) including lymphedema, seroma, numbness, wound infection, reduced shoulder motility, and chronic pain.2 The gold standard for sentinel node detection is the 'combined technique'; using both blue dye and radioisotope injection. After allowing both radioisotope and blue dye to localize in the lymphatic system, the clinician uses a 'gamma probe' (a handheld scintillation counter) to locate the SLNs. The blue dye assists in localisation post-incision, with lymph nodes that are blue and/or radioactive are judged as 'SLNs' and excised. Some centres use either radioisotope or blue dye alone. Although detection rates are lower, they can still reach satisfying values in experienced centres. The use of radioisotope exposes patients and healthcare workers to radiation, is heavily controlled by legislation (both on the specific training for operators and subsequent disposal of surgical waste), and provides poor pre-operative imaging. As a result, many centres have stopped undertaking routine pre-operative lymphoscintigraphy. There is thus a clinical need to develop new techniques for detecting sentinel nodes without these drawbacks.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICESentimag DeviceThe programme will compare the Sentimag with the conventional sentinel lymph node detection with radioactive tracer combined with blue dye (in centres using the combined technique) and thereby determine whether the new technique is equivalent to the standard technique for SLNB

Timeline

Start date
2016-09-22
Primary completion
2018-05-01
Completion
2018-05-01
First posted
2016-04-15
Last updated
2019-06-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02739425. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.