| Literature DB >> 32157414 |
André Pfob1, Vivian Koelbel1, Florian Schuetz1, Manuel Feißt2, Maria Blumenstein1, André Hennigs1, Michael Golatta1, Joerg Heil3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Little is known about the reason of high short-term complication rates after the subcutaneous placement of breast implants or expanders after mastectomy without biological matrices or synthetic meshes. This study aims to evaluate complications and their risk factors to develop guidelines for decreasing complication rates.Entities:
Keywords: Drain management; Mastectomy; Shared decision making; Subcutaneous breast implant
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32157414 PMCID: PMC7103012 DOI: 10.1007/s00404-020-05481-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Gynecol Obstet ISSN: 0932-0067 Impact factor: 2.344
Study cohort characteristics
| Variable | Mean (standard deviation) | Median (quartile 1; quartile 3) | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 46.0 (11.8) | 46.5 (37.5; 52.5) | 92 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 25.8 (6.0) | 23.7 (21.9; 28.4) | 91 |
| Mastectomy weight (g) | 416.4 (240.1) | 385.0 (260.0; 496.0) | 89 |
| Implant volume (ml) | 397.2 (160.2) | 375.0 (275.0; 470.0) | 85 |
| Expander volume intraoperatively (ml) | 143.3 (48.0) | 150.0 (150.0; 180.0) | 6 |
| Drain duration (days) | 5.9 (3.1) | 5.0 (4.0; 8.0) | 85 |
| Drain cumulative volume (ml) | 458.3 (521.9) | 285.0 (140.0; 585.0) | 85 |
| Drain volume last 24 h (ml) | 16.7 (11.5) | 20.0 (6.5; 21.5) | 84 |
| Prophylactic antibiotics duration (days) | 2.8 (3.3) | 1.0 (1.0; 4.0) | 92 |
ALND axillary lymph node dissection, SLNB sentinel lymphe node biopsy, NACT neoadjuvant chemotherapy
Complication rates in subcutaneous implant placement (n = 92)
| Complication | Yes (%) | No (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Explantation | 15 (16.3) | 77 (83.7) |
| One-stage reconstruction | 14 (16.3) | 72 (83.7) |
| Two-stage reconstruction | 1 (16.7) | 5 (83.3) |
| Seroma aspirated (nominal) | 17 (18.5) | 75 (81.5) |
| Hematoma or bleeding requiring surgery | 5 (5.4) | 87 (94.6) |
| Impaired wound healing or infection | 23 (25.0) | 69 (75.0) |
| Impaired wound healing or infection requiring surgery | 19 (20.7) | 73 (79.3) |
| Major nipplenecrosis (> 50%) | 5 (5.4) | 87 (94.6) |
| Major complication (requiring surgery) | 26 (28.3) | 66 (71.7) |
| Minor complication (not requiring surgery) | 31 (33.7) | 61 (66.3) |
Risk factors associated with complications in multivariate analysis for subcutaneous implant placement
| Dependent variable | Independent variable | OR (95% confidence interval) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Explantation | Implant volume | 0.023 | 2.022 (1.101–3.712) |
| Surgeon | 0.026 | 0.087 (0.010–0.743) | |
| Seroma aspirated (nominal) | Drain volume last 24 h before removal | 0.049 | 1.724 (1.002–2.964) |
| Impaired wound healing or infection requiring surgery | Surgeon | 0.003 | 0.037 (0.004–0.326) |
| Resection weight | 0.035 | 2.057 (1.051–4.027) | |
| Nipple necrosis | Incision type (periareolar with extension medial or lateral) | 0.011 | 22.568 (2.030–250.864) |
OR odds ratio
Complications associated with explantation in subcutaneous implant placement
| Complication | Explantation | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| No (% as rows) | Yes (% as rows) | ||
| Seroma aspirated (nominal) | |||
| No | 66 (88.0) | 9 (12.0) | 0.030 |
| Yes | 11 (64.7) | 6 (35.3) | |
| Hematoma or bleeding requiring surgery | |||
| No | 72 (82.8) | 15 (17.2) | 0.587 |
| Yes | 5 (100.0) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Impaired wound healing or infection | |||
| No | 69 (100.0) | 0 (0.0) | < 0.001 |
| Yes | 8 (34.8) | 15 (65.2) | |
| Impaired wound healing or infection requiring surgery | |||
| No | 77 (93.9) | 5 (6.1) | < 0.001 |
| Yes | 4 (21.1) | 15 (78.9) | |
| Nipplenecrosis | |||
| No | 74 (85.1) | 13 (14.9) | 0.185 |
| Yes | 3 (60.0) | 2 (40.0) | |
| Major complication | |||
| No | 66 (100.0) | 0 (0.0 | < 0.001 |
| Yes | 11 (42.3) | 15 (57.7) | |
Fig. 1Resection margins for moderate vs. radical subcutaneous tissue resection. The six breast surgeons were asked to illustrate their typical resection margins for the same patient`s preoperative mammography (central tumour marked with a clip). Two approaches could be separated: a radical one (b, average resection margins of 4 surgeons) and a moderate one (a, average resection margins of 2 surgeons). Arrow illustrates the maximum distance between the two groups
Fig. 2Postoperative skin flap thickness for moderate vs. radical subcutaneous tissue resection. Exemplary postoperative skin flap thickness after moderate subcutaneous resection (left, 11 months post-surgery) and radical subcutaneous resection (right, 4 months post-surgery); arrows illustrate skin flap thickness