Management of the axilla – Indications for further axillary treatment #1

Recommendation

Management of the axilla – Indications for further axillary treatment #1

Discuss further axillary treatment (axillary node clearance or radiation therapy) in patients who have more than two macrometastases.

How this guidance was developed

This recommendation was adapted from the NICE 2018 guidelines (UK) under the heading ‘Evaluation and management of a positive axillary lymph node identified by a sentinel lymph node biopsy (in people with a normal preoperative ultrasound-guided needle biopsy’. The source recommendation was based on a systematic review of the evidence conducted to September 2017 and used wording ('Offer') indicative of a strong recommendation (using GRADE methods) by the source guideline authors. The wording was made less directive as the adapted wording reflected a ‘narrower situation’ than that described in the source recommendation. 

This recommendation is also supported by a source recommendation from the ESMO (2019) early breast cancer guidelines (Europe), graded 'A' (using adapted Infectious Diseases Society of America-United States Public Health Service Grading System) which indicates that further axillary surgery is not required for the converse scenario, i.e. low axillary disease burden.

Management of the axilla – Indications for further axillary treatment #1

Recommendation

Discuss further axillary treatment (axillary node clearance or radiation therapy) in patients who have more than two macrometastases.

Principles in action
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Patient-centred care
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Care coordination
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Communication

This recommendation was adapted from the NICE 2018 guidelines (UK) under the heading ‘Evaluation and management of a positive axillary lymph node identified by a sentinel lymph node biopsy (in people with a normal preoperative ultrasound-guided needle biopsy’. The source recommendation was based on a systematic review of the evidence conducted to September 2017 and used wording ('Offer') indicative of a strong recommendation (using GRADE methods) by the source guideline authors. The wording was made less directive as the adapted wording reflected a ‘narrower situation’ than that described in the source recommendation. 

This recommendation is also supported by a source recommendation from the ESMO (2019) early breast cancer guidelines (Europe), graded 'A' (using adapted Infectious Diseases Society of America-United States Public Health Service Grading System) which indicates that further axillary surgery is not required for the converse scenario, i.e. low axillary disease burden.