Commission on Cancer Quality Measure for Omission of Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy (SNB) in Women Age 70 or Older with Hormone Receptor-Positive (HR+) Invasive Breast Cancer (IBC) Undergoing Breast-Conserving Surgery (BCS): Review of Historical Performance.

Journal: Annals of surgical oncology

Study focus

  • The study evaluated how often US hospitals omit sentinel lymph node biopsy (SNB) in women ≥70 years with cT1N0, hormone receptor–positive, HER2‑negative invasive breast cancer undergoing breast-conserving surgery—a practice now recommended by the Commission on Cancer as a quality measure.

Data and methods

  • Data source: National Cancer Data Base (2012–2023).
  • Population: 185,859 women meeting the above criteria.
  • Outcomes:
    • Trends in SNB omission over time.
    • Facility-level estimated performance rates (EPR: proportion of eligible patients not receiving SNB).
    • Facility characteristics associated with achieving at least the median omission rate (25% EPR) via multivariable analysis.

Key results

  • Overall omission: SNB was omitted in 23.4% (43,513/185,859) of eligible patients.
  • Time trend: Omission increased from 14% in 2012 to 44% in 2023 but still remained under half of eligible cases in 2023.
  • Facility performance (2021–2023):
    • 30% EPR achieved by 52.9% of facilities.
    • 40% EPR achieved by 41.9% of facilities.
    • 50% EPR achieved by 31.7% of facilities.
    • 60% EPR achieved by 22.5% of facilities.
    • 70% EPR achieved by 12.5% of facilities.
    • 80% EPR achieved by only 6.9% of facilities.
  • Facilities more likely to reach at least the median 25% EPR (on multivariate analysis):
    • >50% of patients privately insured (OR 1.7, 95% CI 1.23–2.34).
    • Academic/teaching centers (OR 2.12, 95% CI 1.36–3.3).
    • High-volume centers (>250 annual cases; OR 2.07, 95% CI 1.35–3.18).
    • Certain US census regions were also associated with higher omission, though specific regions are not detailed in the abstract.
    • All listed associations were statistically significant (p < 0.05).

Conclusion and implication

  • By 2023, fewer than half of eligible older women had SNB omitted, despite evidence supporting omission in this group.
  • There is substantial variability across facilities, with higher omission rates in academic, high-volume, and more privately insured centers.
  • These data highlight a significant, system-level opportunity to improve adherence to this de-escalation quality measure in early-stage HR+/HER2‑negative breast cancer in older patients.

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