| Literature DB >> 23986868 |
F Corsi1, L Sorrentino, D Bossi, A Sartani, D Foschi.
Abstract
Breast-conserving surgery (BCS) is the treatment of choice for early breast cancer. The adequacy of surgical margins (SM) is a crucial issue for adjusting the volume of excision and for avoiding local recurrences, although the precise definition of an adequate margins width remains controversial. Moreover, other factors such as the biological behaviour of the tumor and subsequent proper systemic therapies may influence the local recurrence rate (LRR). However, a successful BCS requires preoperative localization techniques or margin assessment techniques. Carbon marking, wire-guided, biopsy clips, radio-guided, ultrasound-guided, frozen section analysis, imprint cytology, and cavity shave margins are commonly used, but from the literature review, no single technique proved to be better among the various ones. Thus, an association of two or more methods could result in a decrease in rates of involved margins. Each institute should adopt its most congenial techniques, based on the senologic equipe experience, skills, and technologies.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23986868 PMCID: PMC3748755 DOI: 10.1155/2013/793819
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Surg Oncol ISSN: 2090-1402
Local recurrence rates and corresponding threshold distances for negative margins are indicated for each study.
| Study | Surgical margins | Local recurrences |
|---|---|---|
| Horiguchi et al., 2002 [ | 5 mm | 3.2% |
| Karasawa et al., 2003 [ | 5 mm | 1.7% |
| Perez, 2003 [ | 3 mm | 5.8% |
| Peterson et al., 1999 [ | 2 mm | 12.8% (*) |
| Santiago et al., 2004 [ | 2 mm | 12.2% |
| Karasawa et al., 2005 [ | 2 mm (2.1–5 mm) | 3.4% (6.3%) |
| Gage et al., 1996 [ | 1 mm | 10.5% (*) |
| Park et al., 2000 [ | 1 mm | 16% (*) |
| Kreike et al., 2008 [ | 1 mm | 11.5% |
*Average percentage calculated from single LRRs for each type of margins status.
Most common features associated with positive surgical margins [20–23].
| Predicting factors of margin status | |
|---|---|
| Presence of DCIS |
|
| Multifocal disease |
|
| Tumor size |
|
| Lobular histology |
|
| Microcalcifications on mammography |
|
Rates of adequate margins and main disadvantages for each technique.
| Technique | Rate of adequate margins | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Carbon marking | 81.1% | Possible foreign-body reactions mimicking malignancy on follow up; obstruction of needle tip due to charcoal precipitation. |
| Wire-guided | 70.8–87.4% | Wire dislodgment; vasovagal episodes; pneumothorax. |
| ROLL | 75–93.5% | Possible widespread dispersal of the tracer by accidental intraductal injection; nuclear medicine department required; for experienced surgeons; expensive. |
| Clip marker | 90–92% | Clip migration. |
| US-guided | 89–97% | DCIS rarely visible on US if not marked with a clip or hematoma. |
| Cavity shave | 91.3–94.4% | Long operative times. |
| Imprint cytology and frozen section analysis | 89–91% | Sensibility equal to 72–83%; possible difficult interpretation by pathologist due to presence of irregular specimen's surfaces or atypical cells; long operative times. |