RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To explore the significance of intraoperative sentinel lymph node (SLN) identification in endometrial cancer. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 56 patients with intraoperative SLN recognition (group A) and 50 patients without intraoperative SLN recognition (group B). SLN and pelvic abdominal lymph node distribution, SLN recognition rate, SLN recognition effect, mortality, the incidence of adverse events, and cumulative survival rate were statistically analyzed. RESULTS: SLN were identified and removed in 41 of the 56 patients, with a recognition rate of 82.14% (46/56). The sensitivity of SLN was 83.72%, the specificity was 84.62%, and the negative predictive value was 61.11%. There were 15 patients with no SLN metastasis found in the pathological examination during the operation, among which two patients with poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma and clinical stage II patients underwent immunohistochemical staining, and three patients showed SLN micro-metastasis but no cancer tissue metastasis in the lymph node dissection. There was no significant difference in the incidence of total adverse events between group A and group B (P>0.05). The cumulative survival rate of group A was higher than that of group B (P=0.018). CONCLUSION: Intraoperative SLE identification can avoid false negative results, is safe and feasible, and can prolong the survival time of patients with endometrial cancer.