We conducted this study to provide one of the initial assessments of treatment outcomes for breast cancer patients evaluated with sentinel node mapping. All patients diagnosed with breast carcinoma, evaluated with sentinel node mapping, and followed for 5 years were divided into three groups depending on sentinel node(s) status. Group I (node negative) included 91 patients, 77 with invasive cancer, and 7 lost to follow-up. Of the remaining 70 patients, 3 (4.3%) suffered a distant recurrence and died, 1 developed an in-breast recurrence, and 9 (12.9%) developed a contralateral cancer during the study. Group II (IHC positive) included 28 patients. One (3.6%) developed a distant recurrence and died of breast cancer, and one developed a contralateral cancer during follow. Group III (H&E positive) included 36 patients with 1 lost to follow-up. Five patients (14.3%) died of breast cancer and two (5.7%) developed contralateral carcinomas during follow-up. The most striking observation was a lower than expected rate of distant recurrences in these patients followed for 5 years after a diagnosis of breast cancer and staging with sentinel node mapping. The ability to identify subtle nodal metastasis and design appropriate systemic therapeutic strategies may explain this finding.