Surgical staging of the axilla is carried out either by axillary clear
ance or an axillary sampling procedure. During both axillary sampling
and axillary clearance the intercostobrachial nerve can be damaged. A
questionnaire was sent to 150 patients, 50 of whom had an axillary cle
arance preserving the intercostobrachial nerve, 50 who had axillary cl
earance dividing the nerve and 50 who had axillary sampling. One hundr
ed and nineteen of the 150 surveys were returned and 110 were fully co
mpleted and analysed. Patients having axillary node sampling had signi
ficantly less numbness than patients having an axillary node clearance
(P = 0.0003). Patients who had the intercostobrachial nerve preserved
during axillary clearance had significantly less numbness than those
who had their nerve divided (P = 0.041). There was also a much lower f
requency of numbness in the distribution of the intercostobrachial ner
ve, 10% versus 35%, P = 0.03. Even when patients who had an axillary c
learance and had their nerve preserved were compared with patients hav
ing an axillary node sampling there was less numbness in the sampling
group, P = 0.038. There was no difference in pain in patients undergoi
ng axillary clearance whether they had the nerve preserved or divided,
but of those who did develop pain it was much more likely to be moder
ate or severe in the nerve divided group, P < 0.0001. There was a sign
ificant increase in the number of women reporting arm stiffness in the
axillary clearance group when the intercostobrachial nerve was divide
d, P = 0.008. This study demonstrates that axillary sampling produces
less numbness than an axillary clearance whether the intercostobrachia
l nerve is preserved or not. In patients undergoing a full axillary cl
earance, preservation of the intercostobrachial nerve limits the morbi
dity of this procedure.