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RecruitingNCT06163963

Sentinel Lymph Node in Early-Stage Endometrium Cancer

Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping with Double Tracer and Double Injection Sites in Early-Stage Endometrium Cancer

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
Istanbul University · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of this prospective study is to investigate whether the detection rate of sentinel lymph node (SLN) with double tracer injected at two different sites may be increased compared to the standard use of a single tracer with single site (cervix) injection in early-stage endometrial cancer.

Detailed description

Endometrial cancer is the most common gynecologic cancer. Although 85-90% of women are diagnosed at early stage, about 10-15% are diagnosed at advanced stages. Treatment and prognosis depends on the surgical staging of the apparently early stage disease including the evaluation of lymphatic status of the disease. Detection of positive lymph node upstages the apparently early stage endometrial cancer. However, systematic lymphadenectomy carries immediate and long term risks for patients including bleeding, massive transfusions, prolongation of operation time, serious major vessel and major abdominal organ injury and death. These risks are especially increased in para-aortic lymphadenectomy which is a part of staging procedure in apparently early stage endometrial cancer. Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) procedure is the biopsy of one or two lymph node(s) which represents the lymph node basin draining the area of malignancy. This biopsy may potentially eliminate the need systemic pelvic / para-aortic lymphadenectomy which harbours potential complications. Although SLNB became an standard procedure in endometrial cancer, available data on the SLNB in endometrial cancer is variable. The relevant literature suggests that the detection rate of sentinel lymph node using various tracer agents are between %70-98, even with lower for bilateral pelvic detection and para-aortic sentinel lymph node(s). The most commonly used tracer agents are methylene blue, radiolabeled colloid technetium 99 (Tc99), isosulfan blue and fluorescent indocyanine green. Although subserosal, intramyometrial uterine injections and peritumoral injections using hysteroscopy with different tracers and different detection rates have been used, cervical injection with ICG is the most favoured and standard technique with highest pelvic SLN detection rates. However, the para-aortic SLN detection rates are not satisfactory with a single tracer injected into cervix which may be critical especially in high grade endometrioid, serous and clear cell histological types. So, investigators aimed to investigate whether the sentinel lymph node detection rates may be improved with double tracer injected at two different sites (charcoal carbon black dye injected in subserosa and ICG injected into cervix) compared to standard single tracer injected in early-stage endometrial cancer, especially the para-aortic sentinel lymph nodes. Sterile charcoal carbon black dye is an agent previously used for sentinel lymph node detection in various cancers such as breast cancer. Technically, 2 mL indocyanine green with sterile water is injected at 3 and 9 o'clocks (each 1 mL) of cervix before the start of laparoscopic operation. Additionally, 2-4 mL of sterile charcoal carbon black dye is carefully injected just beneath the serosal layer at uterine fundus bilaterally avoiding intravascular injection This is done classically during laparoscopy by a spinal needle introduced under optical supervision after all optical and operative instruments are entered. 10-15 minute interval is allowed before the start of harvesting sentinel lymph nodes in pelvic and paraaortic region.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTSentinel Lymph Node Mapping With Double Tracer and Double Injection Sites in Early-Stage Endometrium CancerThis is a single arm interventional prospective study. Sentinel lymph node detection rate of the tracer injected in cervix (ICG- indocyanine green) before operation and the second tracer injected in uterine fundal subserosa (sterile charcoal black) at the start of operation are investigated. It is anticipated that additional tracer used in the uterine serosa may overcome the insufficiency (or increase the detection rate) of the standard single tracer injected in cervix for detection rate of sentinel lymph nodes, especially in paraaortic sentinel lymph nodes.
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTcharcoal injection to uterus to map sentinel lymph nodesDuring surgery for endometrial cancer, charcoal injection to uterus to map sentinel lymph nodes in para aortic area besides the classic ınjection of indocyanine green for pelvic sentinel lymph node mapping.

Timeline

Start date
2023-07-01
Primary completion
2025-11-01
Completion
2026-05-01
First posted
2023-12-11
Last updated
2024-11-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06163963. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.