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The study involved about 850 women who had initial biopsies showing cancer had spread to one or two nearby lymph nodes.
Lymph nodes are tiny structures linked by a network of vessels throughout the body that are part of the disease-fighting immune system. When cancer spreads, it typically travels first to nearby nodes.
About half of the women were randomly assigned to receive the more invasive node surgery; the remainder skipped that surgery.
Roughly 92 percent in both groups were still alive five years later, and 83 percent in both groups had no cancer recurrence. Seventy percent of women in the surgery group had complications, including underarm swelling and wound infection, versus 25 percent in group that skipped it.
Julian, the Pittsburgh breast surgeon, said there were limitations to the research, including how women were recruited.
The researchers approached women who already knew their initial lymph node biopsy results, and only about half as many women as anticipated agreed to be in the study. Higher-risk women who wanted conventional node surgery may have chosen not to participate, which could have skewed the results.
The study authors acknowledge that limitation but said even high-risk study participants, those with breast cancer that doesn't respond to hormone treatment, had good long-term survival rates even without the node surgery.
Julian said lack of extended follow-up is also a concern.
"You need to have 10 years to really know that it's going to hold water," he said.
He said he has cautiously adopted the study approach with older patients, but only on a case-by-case basis with women 50 or younger, who have longer to live and more time for cancer to recur.
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