In a major boost to breast
cancer treatment in India, doctors at AIIMS and Tata Memorial Hospital have
developed an indigenous technology to screen patients for a possible spread of
a tumour. Sentinel node biopsy uses a cheaper dye — fluorescein — to map the
spread of the tumour under ultraviolet light.
The mapping technique
involves injecting a tracer material that helps a surgeon locate the sentinel
nodes during surgery. "We have studied 40 breast cancer patients to assess
the efficacy and safety of fluorescein as an alternative method when compared
to the standard methods of radiotracers and blue dye, which are several times
costlier," said Dr Anurag Srivastava, the head of the surgery department
at AIIMS. Overall, sentinel-node identification rate using the new technique
was 97.5%. "False negative probability in this study was zero,"
Srivastava said.
The mapping is the best
way to find out if breast cancer cells have escaped the original tumour and
spread to nearby lymph nodes in the armpit. It is performed as part of breast
cancer surgery. "Only few government hospitals now have the mapping
facility as the dye, sulphur colloid, is costly," said a senior doctor.
Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Indian-doctors-devise-breast-cancer-test/articleshow/32108939.cms
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