Albert Losken1, Ximena Pinell-White2, Alexandra M Hart2, Alessandrina M Freitas2, Grant W Carlson2, Toncred M Styblo2. 1. Dr Losken is Program Director, Drs Pinell-White, Hart, and Freitas are residents, and Dr Carlson is Chief of the Division of Plastic Surgery; and Dr Styblo is Associate Professor of Surgery, Division of Surgical Oncology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia alosken@emory.edu. 2. Dr Losken is Program Director, Drs Pinell-White, Hart, and Freitas are residents, and Dr Carlson is Chief of the Division of Plastic Surgery; and Dr Styblo is Associate Professor of Surgery, Division of Surgical Oncology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reduction mammaplasty during lumpectomy allows more generous resection and minimizes potential for poor cosmesis as compared with breast conservation therapy alone. OBJECTIVES: The authors assessed the benefits of oncoplastic reduction for margin status in patients with breast cancer by conducting a retrospective review of cases of tumor resection alone vs tumor resection with oncoplastic reduction. METHODS: Patients with breast cancer who underwent lumpectomy performed by a single oncologic surgeon between 2009 and 2013 were included. Patients were stratified into 2 groups based on surgical procedure: tumor resection with oncoplastic reduction (group 1) vs tumor resection alone (group 2). Patient demographics including risk factors, diagnosis, cancer stage, and procedure type were recorded. Tumor size, specimen weight, width of narrowest margin, and receptor status were determined. Outcome variables included margin positivity (≤1 mm), need for re-excision, and conversion to completion mastectomy. RESULTS: A total of 222 breasts from 207 patients were included in the study: 83 in group 1 and 139 in group 2. The patients in group 1 had a lower incidence of positive margins and wider free surgical margins, required re-excision less often, and went on to completion mastectomy less often. Patients in group 1 were younger and had cancer that was more advanced. When controlling for these variables on multivariate regression analysis, the oncoplastic technique was independently associated with fewer positive margins and fewer instances of re-excision. CONCLUSIONS: The oncoplastic reduction technique achieves wider free margins and less often necessitates re-excision or subsequent mastectomy. The long-term oncologic effect of this approach deserves further study. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 4.
BACKGROUND: Reduction mammaplasty during lumpectomy allows more generous resection and minimizes potential for poor cosmesis as compared with breast conservation therapy alone. OBJECTIVES: The authors assessed the benefits of oncoplastic reduction for margin status in patients with breast cancer by conducting a retrospective review of cases of tumor resection alone vs tumor resection with oncoplastic reduction. METHODS:Patients with breast cancer who underwent lumpectomy performed by a single oncologic surgeon between 2009 and 2013 were included. Patients were stratified into 2 groups based on surgical procedure: tumor resection with oncoplastic reduction (group 1) vs tumor resection alone (group 2). Patient demographics including risk factors, diagnosis, cancer stage, and procedure type were recorded. Tumor size, specimen weight, width of narrowest margin, and receptor status were determined. Outcome variables included margin positivity (≤1 mm), need for re-excision, and conversion to completion mastectomy. RESULTS: A total of 222 breasts from 207 patients were included in the study: 83 in group 1 and 139 in group 2. The patients in group 1 had a lower incidence of positive margins and wider free surgical margins, required re-excision less often, and went on to completion mastectomy less often. Patients in group 1 were younger and had cancer that was more advanced. When controlling for these variables on multivariate regression analysis, the oncoplastic technique was independently associated with fewer positive margins and fewer instances of re-excision. CONCLUSIONS: The oncoplastic reduction technique achieves wider free margins and less often necessitates re-excision or subsequent mastectomy. The long-term oncologic effect of this approach deserves further study. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 4.
Authors: Natalie R Almeida; Fabrício P Brenelli; Cesar C Dos Santos; Renato Z Torresan; Júlia Y Shinzato; Cassio Cardoso-Filho; Giuliano M Duarte; Nicoli S de Azevedo; Luiz Carlos Zeferino Journal: JPRAS Open Date: 2021-06-06
Authors: Idam de Oliveira-Junior; Igor de Araujo da Silva; Fabíola Cristina Brandini da Silva; Jonathas José da Silva; Almir José Sarri; Carlos Eduardo Paiva; René Aloisio da Costa Vieira Journal: Breast Care (Basel) Date: 2020-07-17 Impact factor: 2.268