| Literature DB >> 22666571 |
P Orsaria1, A V Granai, D Venditti, G Petrella, O Buonomo.
Abstract
Counseling patients with DCIS in a rational manner can be extremely difficult when the range of treatment criteria results in diverse and confusing clinical recommendations. Surgeons need tools that quantify measurable prognostic factors to be used in conjunction with clinical experience for the complex decision-making process. Combination of statistically significant tumor recurrence predictors and lesion parameters obtained after initial excision suggests that patients with DCIS can be stratified into specific subsets allowing a scientifically based discussion. The goal is to choose the treatment regimen that will significantly benefit each patient group without subjecting the patients to unnecessary risks. Exploring the effectiveness of complete excision may offer a starting place in a new way of reasoning and conceiving surgical modalities in terms of "downscoring" or "upscoring" patient risk, perhaps changing clinical approach. Reexcison may lower the specific subsets' score and improve local recurrence-free survival also by revealing a larger tumor size, a higher nuclear grade, or an involved margin and so suggesting the best management. It seems, that the key could be identifying significant relapse predictive factors, according to validated risk investigation models, whose value is modifiable by the surgical approach which avails of different diagnostic and therapeutic potentials to be optimal. Certainly DCIS clinical question cannot have a single curative mode due to heterogeneity of pathological lesions and histologic classification.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22666571 PMCID: PMC3362033 DOI: 10.1155/2012/560493
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Surg Oncol ISSN: 2090-1402
The USC/VNPI scoring system.
| Van Nuys Prognostic Index | |||
| Parameter | Score 1 | Score 2 | Score 3 |
| Van Nuys Classification | Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 3 |
| Non high nuclear grade without necrosis | Nonhigh nuclear grade with necrosis | High nuclear gradewith or without necrosis | |
| Margins | ≥10 mm | 1–9 mm | <1 mm |
| Size | <15 mm | 16–40 mm | >40 mm |
| Age | >60 | 40–60 | <40 |
Modified from Silverstein; Ductal Carcinoma in situ of the breast 2nd ed. 2002.
| Author and reference | Parameter | Results | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ottesen et al. [ | Size | 10-year LR rates of DCIS treated by BCS alone ( | |||
| <10 mm | LR 11% | ||||
| >10 mm | LR 48% | ||||
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| Cutuli et al. [ | Size | 5-year LR rates of BCS versus BCS + RT groups ( | |||
| <10 mm | LR 30% | LR 11% | |||
| >10 mm | LR 31% | LR 13% | |||
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| Dunne et al. [ | Margin | Optimum margin threshold for DCIS resection ( | |||
| Number of patients | Negative Margin Width | Percentage of patients with IBTR (5-year follow-up) | |||
| 914 | No cells on ink | 9.4 | |||
| 1,239 | 1 mm margin | 10.4 | |||
| 207 | 2 mm margin | 5.8 | |||
| 154 | ≥5 mm margin | 3.9 | |||
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| Kerlikowske et al. [ | Nuclear Grade | Invasive LR rates of DCIS treated by BCS alone ( | |||
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| MacDonald et al. [ | |||||
| Low-grade lesions | 6% | ||||
| High-grade lesions | 31.5% | ||||
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| Silverstein et al. [ | VNPI Score | LR rates and DFS in three groups of DCIS patients ( | |||
| (1) Non-high-grade DCIS without comedo-type necrosis | 3.8% | 93% | |||
| (2) Non-high-grade DCIS with comedo-type necrosis | 11.1% | 84% | |||
| (3) High-grade DCIS with or without comedo-type necrosis | 26.5% | 61% | |||
Treatment modalities according 1289 DCIS patients.
| Breast surgery | CS 7.8% | CS/RT 61.7% | MX 30.5% |
| (France) | Range (84–96%) | Range (20–37%) | |
| (United States) | Range (39–74%) | Range (26–45%) | |
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| Axillary surgery | SLNB 21.3% | AD 10.4% | |
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| Hormonal therapy | HT 13.4% | ||
| (France) range (6–34%) | |||
Reference [29].
8 years results of conservative and radical treatments in 716 DCIS.
| MX (145) | CS (136) | CS + RT (435) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type of surgery | 20.25% | 18.09% | 60.75% |
| 8-year local recurrence rate | 2.1% (3) | 30.1% (41) | 13.8% (60) |
| Noninvasive local recurrence | 0% (0) | 41.46% (17) | 40% (24) |
| Invasive local recurrence | 100% (3) | 58.53% (24) | 60.0% (36) |
| Nodal recurrence | 0 | 3.7% | 1.8% |
| Metastases | 1.4% (2) | 4.4% (6) | 1.4% (6) |
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| (All distant metastases occurred after previous invasive LR) | |||
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| Metastases among cases of invasive LR in CS and CS + RT 19% (12/60) | |||
Reference [32].
Breast conservative surgery (BCS) results without RT.
| Authors | Patients | Margin width | Local recurrence | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fischer et al. (2001) [ | 818 | 1 mm | 31% | 10 years |
| BiJker et al. (2001) [ | 1010 | 3 mm | 13% | 10 years |
| Houghtons et al. (2003) [ | 1701 | 1 mm | 22% | 4 years |
| Warren et al. (2005) [ | 1103 | 15% | 7 years | |
| Sabin et al. (2011) [ | 670 | 3 mm | High grade 18% | 7 years |
| Heather et al. (2005) [ | 197 | >10 mm | 4.6% | 5 years |
Reexcision specimens analysis in patients treated with lumpectomy for DCIS.
| Margin Width (mm) | Residual Disease | |
|---|---|---|
| (i) Silverstein et al. [ | ≥1 mm | 43% |
| <1 mm | 76% | |
| (ii) Neuschatz et al. [ | 0 mm (transected) | 63% |
| 0-1 mm | 41% | |
| 1-2 mm | 31% |