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Mapping Sentinel Lymph Node in Initial Stages of Ovarian Cancer (MELISA)

H

Hospital Clinic of Barcelona

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Sentinel Lymph Node
Ovarian Cancer

Treatments

Procedure: Sentinel node detection

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05184140
HCB/2021/0130

Details and patient eligibility

About

Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) diagnosed in the initial stage (stage I-II) require complete staging surgery to histologically assess the possible existence of peritoneal or lymph node disease.

Systematic pelvic and paraaortic lymphadenectomy in stage I-II EOC is essential since confirming the presence of lymph node metastases means re-staging the disease as stage III. This change of stage has important prognostic and therapeutic implications. However, the lymph node involvement rate is around 10-30% (average of 15%). Systematic pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy carries a risk of intraoperative complications, as well as longer operative time, postoperative complications and longer hospital stay. Moreover, by now there is no evidence suggesting a possible therapeutic value.

The sentinel lymph node (SLN) detects the first level of lymph node drainage. The absence of metastases in the SLN predicts the absence of tumor infiltration of the rest of lymph nodes of the same anatomical region and allows to safely avoid lymphadenectomy and its associated morbidity. In addition, the exhaustive evaluation of the SLN by ultrastaging and immunohistochemical study allows to increase the detection of microscopic disease.

Sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy, implemented in clinical practice in other gynecological tumors (breast, vulva, cervix or endometrium), has been studied very little in the initial ovarian epithelial cancer. Unlike other gynecological tumors, there are multiple anatomical and technical aspects that largely explain this lack of information. The double ovarian vascularization that accompanies lymphatic drainage explains this higher complexity. Therefore, at the present time, the detection of SLN in the initial EOC remains an experimental area without applicability in clinical practice. There are multiple doubts and issues to be resolved regarding the different tracers, the site and time injection and the actual accuracy of the SLN versus the lymphadenectomy.

Full description

The objective of this study is to know the lymphatic drainage and, if the lesion is malignant, remove the sentinel lymph nodes to know if it can predict the involvement of the remaining lymph nodes to assess the possible applicability of SLN in clinical practice.

Study design:

  1. Evaluation of the ovarian lymphatic map: injection of radiotracer (99mTc-nanocolloid albumin) in patients with a diagnosis of adnexal mass with high suspicion of malignancy. Intraoperative lymphogammagraphy will be performed using a portable gammacamera. Patients with a delayed diagnosis of ovarian cancer who are candidates to undergo a re-staging surgery will be included.
  2. After the adnexectomy a frozen section will be performed to confirm the diagnosis of malignancy and then the ICG (Indocyanine green) tracer will be injected. Since the spread and persistence of the ICG in the lymph nodes is rapid, this tracer will be injected only after confirmation of EOC. Simultaneous screening with a gammadetector probe and NIR (near-infrared spectrum) camera will be used to proceed to the detection of SLN according to the lymphatic map previously.
  3. Ultrastaging of the SLN by applying hematoxylin and eosin staining (H&E) and, in the absence of metastatic disease, evaluation by immunohistochemistry with cytokeratin AE1: AE3.

Enrollment

62 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with a diagnosis of adnexal mass with high suspicion of malignancy and frozen section examination will undergo the lymphatic map with a radiotracer.
  • Patients with intraoperative diagnosis of epithelial ovarian cancer will undergo the SLN exeresis with two tracers.
  • Patients with a delayed diagnosis of epithelial ovarian cancer who are candidates to undergo a re-staging surgery will undergo the SLN exeresis with two tracers.

Exclusion criteria

  • Advanced ovarian cancer (FIGO III/IV)
  • Patients <18 years
  • Pregnancy or lactation
  • Previous vascular surgery (cava, aorta, iliac vessels), lymphadenectomy (pelvic or paraortic) or radiotherapy (pelvic or paraortic field)
  • Severe adherent syndrome that prevents tracer injection
  • The SLN technique will not be performed in case of benign ovarian tumor in the frozen section or borderline tumor (since in these cases there is no clinical indication of performing a lymphadenectomy)
  • Non-operable patient
  • Previous adverse events to the radiotracer or ICG

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

62 participants in 1 patient group

Adnexal mass with high suspicion of malignancy
Experimental group
Description:
An ovarian lymphatic map will be performed in patients with adnexal masses suspected of malignancy. Sentinel node exeresis and a complete staging surgery (including pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy) will be performed in patients with ovarian cancer confirmation including restaging surgeries.
Treatment:
Procedure: Sentinel node detection

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Núria Agustí, MD; Pilar Paredes, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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