| Literature DB >> 26950469 |
Hung-Wen Lai1,2,3,4, Shou-Tung Chen1,2,3, Dar-Ren Chen1,2,3, Shu-Ling Chen1,3, Tsai-Wang Chang5, Shou-Jen Kuo2,3, Yao-Lung Kuo5, Chin-Sheng Hung6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Endoscopy-assisted breast surgery (EABS) performed through minimal axillary and/or periareolar incisions is a possible alternative to open surgery for certain patients with breast cancer. In this study, we report the early results of an EABS program in Taiwan.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26950469 PMCID: PMC4780808 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Various types of endoscopy-assisted breast surgery performed for breast cancer.
(a) Endoscopic-assisted partial mastectomy (breast conserving surgery), right breast cancer at three-year postoperative follow-up. (b) Endoscopic-assisted skin-sparing mastectomy without reconstruction, left breast cancer at one-year postoperative follow-up. (c) Endoscopic-assisted nipple-sparing mastectomy without reconstruction, left breast cancer at two-year postoperative follow-up. (d) Endoscopic-assisted skin-sparing mastectomy with immediate breast reconstruction with cohesive gel implant, right breast cancer at four-month postoperative follow-up. (e) Endoscopic-assisted nipple mastectomy with immediate breast reconstruction with cohesive gel implant, left breast cancer and right phyllodes tumor post bilateral endoscopic-assisted nipple-sparing mastectomy with gel implant at eight-month postoperative follow-up. (f) Endoscopic-assisted nipple-sparing mastectomy with immediate breast reconstruction with transverse rectus musculocutaneous (TRAM) flap, right breast cancer at six-month postoperative follow-up.
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients who underwent endoscopic-assisted breast surgery.
| N = 292 patients, total 315 EABS | |
|---|---|
| Gender (Female) | 292 (100%) |
| Age (year, mean) | 48.1 ± 10.0 (23–80) |
| Right/Left | 150(47.6%)/165(52.4%) (bilateral 23) |
| Unilateral/bilateral | 292(92.2%)/23(7.8%) |
| Tumor size (invasive, cm) | 2.2 ± 1.8 (0.1 to 8.5 cm) |
| Multifocal/multicentric breast cancer | 44/315 (13.9%) |
| Lymph node (positive/total) | 70/300 (23.3%), NA = 15 |
| Clinical stage | N = 273 (NA = 42) |
| DCIS | 66 (24.2%) |
| Stage I | 88 (32.2%) |
| Stage II | 117 (42.9%) |
| Stage III | 2 (0.7%) |
| Pathologic stage | N = 300 (NA = 15) |
| DCIS | 86 (28.7%) |
| Stage I | 92 (30.7%) |
| Stage IIa | 74 (24.7%) |
| Stage IIb | 29 (9.7%) |
| Stage IIIa | 18 (6%) |
| Stage IIIc | 1 (0.3%) |
| Mastectomy type | N = 315 |
| Endoscopy assisted NSM | 199 (63.2%) |
| Endoscopy assisted SSM | 70 (22.2%) |
| Endoscopy assisted PM | 46 (14.6%) |
| Axillary surgery | N = 306 (NA = 9) |
| SLNB (only) | 200 (65.4%) |
| SLNB then ALND | 43 (14.1%) |
| ALND | 43 (14.1%) |
| Not down | 20 (6.5%) |
| Grade | N = 264 (NA = 51) |
| I | 66 (25.0%) |
| II | 127 (48.1%) |
| III | 71 (26.9%) |
| ER | N = 295 (NA = 20) |
| Negative | 61 (20.7%) |
| Positive | 234 (79.3%) |
| PR | N = 295 (NA = 20) |
| Negative | 101 (34.2%) |
| Positive | 194 (65.8%) |
| HER-2 | N = 291 (NA = 24) |
| Negative | 242 (83.2%) |
| Overexpressed | 49 (16.8%) |
| Hormone therapy | 168/275 (61.1%) (NA = 40) |
| Chemotherapy | 132/275 (48%) (NA = 40) |
| Radiotherapy | 70/280 (25%) (NA = 35) |
EATM: endoscopic assisted total mastectomy, TRAM: transverse abdominal musculocutaneous flap, DCIS: ductal carcinoma in situ, NSM: nipple sparing mastectomy, SSM: skin sparing mastectomy, PM: partial mastectomy, SLNB: sentinel lymph node biopsy, ALND: axillary lymph node dissection. NA: not available. ER: estrogen receptor, PR: progesterone receptor, HER-2: human epidermal growth receptor-2.
Fig 2Trend in usage of endoscopy-assisted breast surgery during the period 2009 to 2014 in Taiwan.
(a) The number of breast cancer patients who received EABS increased gradually over the past 6 years. The number increased sharply from 2009 to 2012 and then decreased and became stable during the period 2012–2014. This decrease was consistently observed at the three EABS centers in Taiwan. (b) Over the past 6 years (2009–2014), there has been a trend toward use of EABS in the management of breast cancer when total mastectomy was indicated (EATM. (c) Initially E-NSM was performed in conjunction with breast reconstruction. Then EATM without reconstruction was performed gradually. During the study period, there was an increase in the number of EATM procedures performed with IBR, followed by EATM alone without reconstruction and then EPM. (d) The use of gel implants for breast reconstruction increased more rapidly than TRAM flap. Endoscopy-assisted nipple-sparing mastectomy with gel implant reconstruction was the most frequent type of EABS performed at the end of the study.
Types of EABS procedures performed in the study and associated characteristics.
| N = 315 EABS | |
|---|---|
| EATM | N = 269 |
| ENSM | n = 199 |
| E-NSM + Gel implant | 118(59.3%) |
| E-NSM + TRAM | 45(22.6%) |
| E-NSM only | 36(18.1%) |
| ESSM | n = 70 |
| E-SSM + Gel implant | 21(30%) |
| E-SSM + TRAM | 10(14.3%) |
| E-SSM + Tissue expander | 4(5.7%) |
| E-SSM only | 35(50%) |
| OP time all (mins) | 282 ± 161 (65–1310) |
| Mean mastectomy time | 219 ± 85 (60–540) |
| Mean reconstruction time | 154 ± 138 (35–770) |
| Blood loss (ml) | 104.5 ± 74.9 (20–650) |
| Mean mastectomy weight (g) | 313.5 ± 147.9 (89–745) |
| Reconstruction flap weight (g) | 500 ± 65.9 (370–600) |
| Reconstruction implant volume (ml) | 287.9 ± 95.0 (120–600) |
| Hospital stay (days) | 5.6 ± 2.1 (2–15) |
| EPM | N = 46 |
| Mean operation time (mins) | 193 ± 69 (65–325) |
| Mean blood loss (ml) | 40.2 ± 20.2 (10–100) |
| Mean resection partial mastectomy weight (g) | 61.3 ± 27.4 (25–128) |
| Mean hospital stay (days) | 3.7 ± 1.1 (2–6) |
EABS: endoscopic assisted breast surgery, EATM: endoscopic assisted total mastectomy (including endoscopic assisted nipple sparing mastectomy (E-NSM) and endoscopic assisted skin sparing mastectomy (E-SSM)), TRAM: transverse abdominal musculocutaneous flap, EPM: endoscopic assisted partial mastectomy.
Comparison of operation time between different EABS and conventional operations.
| OP time | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total mastectomy | EATM (n = 269) | Conventional TM (n = 316) | P value |
| TM only | 223.4 ± 72.0 (65–390) | 145.5 ± 45.6 (55–605) | <0.01 |
| TM + Gel-implant | 282.1 ± 113.4 (110–580) | 225.2 ± 75.0 (84–407) | 0.0262 |
| TM + TRAM flap | 693.2 ± 291.0 (195–1310) | 532.7 ± 33.3 (440–720) | 0.397 |
| TM + Tissue expander | 235.5 ± 127.1 (70–450) | 267.5 ± 58.5 (260–270) | 0.895 |
| Partial mastectomy | EPM (n = 46) | PM (n = 322) | P value |
| 193.4 ± 69.3 (65–325) | 113.3 ± 45.6 (55–555) | <0.01 | |
EABS: endoscopic assisted breast surgery, EATM: endoscopic assisted total mastectomy (including endoscopic assisted nipple sparing mastectomy (E-NSM) and endoscopic assisted skin sparing mastectomy (E-SSM)), TRAM: transverse abdominal musculocutaneous flap, EPM: endoscopic assisted partial mastectomy, PM: partial mastectomy, TM: total mastectomy.
Complications associated with EABS.
| Complications | N = 315 |
|---|---|
| Delayed healing of the areolar wound | 4.8% (15/315) |
| Partial ischemia of the nipple-areolar complex | 8.5% (17/199) |
| Complete necrosis of the nipple-areolar complex | 4% (8/199) |
| Seroma formation requiring repeat aspiration | 2.5% (8/315) |
| Hematoma formation | 1.6% (5/315) |
| Infection-related complication | 1% (3/315) |
| Breast skin flap ischemia/necrosis | 2.5% (8/315) |
| Implant loss | 2.1% (3/143) |
| TRAM flap partial fat necrosis | 9.1% (5/55) |
| Total TRAM Flap loss | 0% (0/55) |
| Poor wound healing or dehiscence at the donor site | 7.3% (4/55) |
| Abdominal bulging/hernia | 0% (0/55) |
EABS: endoscopic-assisted breast surgery.
Complications calculation:
*Overall: patients with any one complication were included in the calculation. Each patient could have more than one complication.
# among those who received endoscopic-assisted nipple sparing mastectomy. EATM: endoscopic-assisted total mastectomy, TRAM: transverse abdominal musculocutaneous flap.
Oncologic safety analysis of patients received EABS.
| Margin involvement | |
|---|---|
| | 6/315(1.9%) |
| | 3/269(1.1%) |
| | 2/199(1%) |
| A 37 y/o female, pT1cN0M0, post E-NSM + Gel implant reconstruction and superficial margin involvement. Further surgery showed no residual cancer and no recurrence 2.8 years after surgery | |
| A 42 y/o female, pT1bN0M0, post E-NSM + Gel implant reconstruction with deep margin involvement. No further surgery was performed, and no recurrence was found 3 year post operation. | |
| | 1/70(1.4%) |
| A 49 y/o female with left DCIS post E-SSM, margins positive over anterior lateral aspect, further surgery showed no residual cancer | |
| | 3/46 (6.5%) |
| A 54 y/o female with left DCIS post partial mastectomy with lateral margin involvement S/P further wide excision: pathology: residual DCIS. Received radiotherapy without local recurrence 4 years after operation. | |
| A 40 y/o female, right IDC, pT2N1M0, post EPM + axillary lymph node dissection, pathology: deep margin involvement, no further surgery, received radiotherapy and follow up, no recurrence post 3.5 years | |
| A 52 y/o female, cT2N1M0, post neoadjuvant chemotherapy, S/P EPM, Margins DCIS (+) lateral; IDC 1mm from lateral and superior margin. S/P further wide excision, pathology: residual cancer. | |
| A 47 y/o female, right breast cancer, multifoci, S/P E-NSM, local regional recurrence over the breast 26.5 months later post surgery, S/P further wide excision + axillary lymph node dissection. Currently under letrozole treatment without recurrence. | |
| A 51 y/o female, right breast cancer S/P E-NSM + Gel implant reconstruction, sentinel lymph node negative, pT1N0M0, ER(low positive), PR(negative) HER-2 positive breast cancer. Refused chemotherapy and herceptin treatment, only received letrozole treatment. Axillary lymph node recurrence 2 years after surgery. | |
| A 33 y/o female, right breast cancer, pT1bN0M0, S/P E-SSM + TRAM reconstruction, CNB tract recurrence 1 month post surgery, S/P further surgery, no local recurrence after 4.2 years of follow-up | |
| A 33 y/o female with bilateral triple negative breast cancer, right pT2N1Mx, and left pT1N0Mx, received bilateral E-NSM + TRAM reconstruction. Post operation, adjuvant chemotherapy with 4 cycles of FEC (5-FU, epirubicin and cyclophopshamide), and 12 weekly paclitaxel were performed. Post mastectomy radiotherapy for right breast was also delivered due to positive axillary lymph node. She developed brain metastasis 8 months after the operation. | |
| A 33 y/o female with bilateral triple negative breast cancer, received bilateral E-NSM + TRAM reconstruction, developed brain metastasis 8 months post operation. Whole brain irradiation and cisplatin were given, this patient died 6 months later due to brain metastasis. | |
EATM: endoscopic assisted total mastectomy, E-NSM: endoscopic assisted nipple sparing mastectomy, E-SSM: endoscopic assisted skin sparing mastectomy, EPM: endoscopic assisted partial mastectomy, DCIS: ductal carcinoma in situ, IDC: infiltrating ductal carcinoma, TRAM: transverse abdominal musculocutaneous flap.
Oncologic safety of EABS as reported in the literature and in the current study.
| Tamoki21 | 2001 | Surg Laparosc Endosc Percutan Tech | 6 | E-PM | 0% | one margin+ & convert TM | |||||
| Lee22 | 2006 | World J Surg | 20 | E-PM | 10%(2/20) | Cosmetic f/u 3m | |||||
| Yamashita19 | 2006 | J Nippon Med Sch | 82 | E-PM | 0% | 25 | 0% | 0% | |||
| Yamashita38 | 2008 | Am J Surg | 20 | E-PM | 0% | 12 | 0% | 0% | |||
| Nakajima24 | 2009 | Ann Surg | 551 | E-PM | 20.5%(113/551) | 35 | 4.2%(23/551) | 4.5%(25/551) | 1.3%(7/551) | ||
| Park27 | 2011 | J Breast Cancer | 40 | E-PM | 5%(2/40) | 12 | 0% | ||||
| 681 | BCS | 10.6%(85/681) | 12 | 0.3%(2/681) | |||||||
| Ozaki28 | 2013 | J Laparoendosc Adv Surg Tech | 73 | E-PM | 1.4%(1/73) | 18.1(12–30) | 0% | ||||
| 90 | BCS | 43.7(14–70) | 1.1%(1/90) | ||||||||
| Takahashi29 | 2014 | Surg Today | 100 | E-PM | 4% | 23(9–40) | 0% | 0% | 0% | ||
| 150 | BCS | 3.3% | 0% | 0% | 0% | ||||||
| T-EBSCG | 2016 | Current study | 46 | E-PM | 6.5%(3/46) | 26.8 (3.3–68.6) | 0% | 0% | 0% | ||
| Nakajima34 | 2002 | Biomed Pharmacother | 17 | E-NSM | LDMF | 0(0%) | 14 | ||||
| Ho32 | 2002 | Surg Endosc | 9 | E-NSM | prothesis, average 235 ml | 0(0%) | |||||
| Ito37 | 2008 | ANZ J Surg | 33 | E-NSM | Prothesis, 30/33 (90.9%) average 235 ml | 8(24.3%) and excised NAC | 3(9.1%) necrosis | 51.2 (16–86) | 0 | 9.1%(3/33) infection with prosthesis removed | |
| Fan30 | 2009 | Chinese Med J | 43 | E-NSM | implant | 0(0%) | 11.6% (5/43) | 16.9±11.2 (6–48) | 0 | 0 | |
| Sakamoto23 | 2009 | Ann Surg Oncol | 87/89 | E-NSM | no mention | 0%, nipple involved 2(2.2%) | 18%(16/89) | 52 (16–80) | 0 | ||
| Tukenmez33 | 2014 | J Laparoendosc Adv Surg Tech | 10/11 | E-NSM | prothesis, implant 4, expander 6 | 0%,subnipple biopsy 1 (9.1%) positive | 0% | 3 | |||
| 2016 | Current study | 269 | E-NSME-SSM | Prothesis: implant, expander, TRAM | 3/269 (1.1%) | 12.5% (25/199) | 26.8 (3.3–68.6) | 1.1 (3/269%) | 0.4% (1/269) | Prothesis loss: 2.1%(3/143) |
m: months, TM: total mastectomy, f/u: follow-up, E-PM: endoscopic assisted partial mastectomy, E-NSM: endoscopic assisted nipple sparing mastectomy, E-SSM: endoscopic assisted skin sparing mastectomy, BCS: breast conserving surgery, LDMF: latissimus dorsi myocutaneous flap, TRAM: transverse rectus musculocutaneous flap.