F. Hartveit, REACTIVE CHANGES IN LYMPH-NODES DRAINING BREAST-CARCINOMA AND THEIR RELATION TO TUMOR SPREAD, International journal of oncology, 2(6), 1993, pp. 969-976
The changes in anatomical structure and functional composition found i
n lymph nodes draining breast carcinoma are commonly termed 'reactive'
. These features are described in relation to nodal tumour growth. The
nodes studied showed increasing structural complexity with increasing
size. Capsular infolding, with subsequent nodal segmentation was prom
inent. Their composition differed from the generally accepted prolifer
ative pattern in that massive T-cell activity was often directly subca
psular. This may represent a local immunological response in nodes tha
t are otherwise unstimulated. They were found in both the presence and
absence of nodal tumour. In tumour-bearing nodes anatomical changes i
nvolved gross modification of the pathways available for tumour spread
. In some this restricted tumour growth to certain nodal segments, but
in others it provided short cuts through the nodes to the efferent dr
aining vessels, potentially increasing the possibility of distant spre
ad. The anatomical changes resulting from the 'reactive changes' in th
e lymphoid cell populations are thus not irrelevant to tumour spread,
although the possible immunological significance of the latter are as
yet unknown.