| Literature DB >> 32370753 |
Vahit Ozmen1,2, Serkan Ilgun3, Burcu Celet Ozden4, Alper Ozturk5, Fatma Aktepe6, Filiz Agacayak7, Filiz Elbuken8, Gul Alco9, Cetin Ordu10, Zeynep Erdogan Iyigun11, Hocaoglu Emre12, Kezban Pilancı13, Gursel Soybir14, Tolga Ozmen15.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The latissimus dorsi muscle has long been used in breast cancer (BC) patients for reconstruction. This study aimed to compare early stage BC patients who had partial mastectomy (PM) with mini latissimus dorsi flap (MLDF) and subcutaneous mastectomy with implant (MI) with respect to quality of life (QoL), cosmetic outcome (CO), and survival rates. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The data of patients who underwent PM + MLDF (Group 1) and M + I (Group 2) between January 2010 and January 2018 were evaluated. Both groups were compared in terms of demographics, clinical and pathological characteristics, surgical morbidity, survival, quality of life, and cosmetic results. The EORTC-QLQ C30 and EORTC-QLO BR23 questionnaires and the Japanese Breast Cancer Society (JBCS) Cosmetic Evaluation Scale were used to assess the quality of life and the cosmetic outcome, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: Breast-conserving surgery; Cosmetic evaluation; EORTC-QLO BR23; EORTC-QLO C30; Implant reconstruction; quality of life; Japanese breast cancer society cosmetic evaluation scale; Mini latissimus dorsi flap; Subcutaneous mastectomy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32370753 PMCID: PMC7201547 DOI: 10.1186/s12957-020-01858-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Fig. 1Position of a BC patient for PM and MLDF, a pillow is inserted behind the left scapula, and left fore-arm fixed the bar. Tumor is localized lower outer quadrant of the breast
Fig. 2a The tumor is excised from circumareolar incision and b superior part of the muscle is identified and divided at its insertion to the humerus, and dissection is continued deep to reach the scapula b
Fig. 3a A tunnel is created between tumor cavity and the axilla, b the arrow shows neurovascular pedicle of the muscle, and c mini latissimus dorsi flap is prepared and ready to fill the cavity c
Fig. 4a The flap is inserted in the tumor cavity, fixed to the edge of pectoralis major muscle, and b Jackson Prett inserted and incisions are closed
Fig. 5a Anterior and b lateral view of the same patient 1 year after the surgery
Comparison of patient and tumor characteristics in two groups
| ( | ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 45 (26–73) | 42 (24–78) | |||
| 24.4 (16.4–44.4) | 22.5 (16.9–32.4) | |||
| 166 (68.6%) | 65 (86.7%) | |||
| 76 (31.4%) | 10 (13.3%) | |||
| 23 (1–90) | 20 (1–80) | |||
| 537.22 ± 235.52 | 613.75 ± 253.83 | |||
| 177 (74.1%) | 37 (50%) | |||
| 62 (25.9%) | 37 (50%) | |||
| 204 (84.3%) | 54 (72%) | 0.056b | ||
| 19 (7.9%) | 10 (13.3%) | |||
| 19 (7.9%) | 11 (14.7%) | |||
| 12 (5%) | 7 (9.5%) | |||
| 92 (38.3%) a | 46 (62.2%) b | |||
| 136 (56.7%) a | 21 (28.4%) b | |||
| 106 (43.8%) | 44 (58.7%) | 0.052b | ||
| 126 (52.1%) | 27 (36%) | |||
| 10 (4.1%) | 4 (5.3%) | |||
| 114 (47.1%) | 51 (68%) | |||
| 128 (52.9%) | 24 (32%) | |||
| 126 (52.1%) | 25 (33.3%) | |||
| 116 (48%) | 50 (66.7%) | |||
| 115 (48%) | 23 (31.5%) | |||
| 125 (52%) | 50 (68.5%) | |||
| 194 (80.2%) | 64 (85.3%) | 0.315b | ||
| 48 (19.8%) | 11 (14.7%) | |||
| 167 (69%) | 57 (76%) | 0.245b | ||
| 75 (31%) | 18 (24%) | |||
| 52 (21.5%) | 15 (20.8%) | 0.90b | ||
| 190 (78.5%) | 57 (79.2%) | |||
| Luminal A | 63 (32%) | 31 (49.2%) | ||
| Luminal B | 134 (68%) | 32 (50.8%) | ||
| HER-2 (+) | 15 (33.3%) | 6 (50%) | 0.28b | |
| TNBC | 30 (66.7%) | 6 (50%) | ||
| 41 (17%) | 17 (23%) | 0.126b | ||
| 201 (83%) | 58 (77%) | |||
| 97% (96.98–97.02) | 97% (96.96–97.04) | 0.976c | ||
| 99% (98.98–99.02) | 97% (96.96–97.04) | 0.377c | ||
| 95% (94.96–95.04) | 93% (92.94–93.06) | 0.361c | ||
ER estrogen receptor, PR progesterone receptor, BMI body mass index, IDC invasive ductal carcinoma, TNBC triple negative breast cancer, ALND axillary lymph node dissection, LVI lymphovascular invasion, ILC invasive lobular carcinoma
aMann Whitney U test
bChi-square test
cLog-rank
Fig. 6Kaplan-Meier survival plots of overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS)
Comparison of two groups by using the EORTC QLQ C30 and BR23 questionnaires
| PM + MLDF | M + I | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 83.3 (0–100) | 83.3 (33.3–100) | 0.21 | |
| 86.6 (26.6–100) | 93.3 (33.3–100) | ||
| 100 (0–100) | 100 (50–100) | 0.053 | |
| 83.3 (0–100) | 83.3 (33–100) | 0.705 | |
| 100 (0–100) | 100 (0–100) | 0.175 | |
| 83.3 (0–100) | 66.6 (17–100) | 0.205 | |
| 33.3 (0–100) | 33.3 (0–100) | 0.58 | |
| 0 (0–100) | 0 (0–66.6) | 0.483 | |
| 16.6 (0–100) | 16.6 (0–100) | 0.155 | |
| 0 (0–66.6)/3.04 | 0 (0–16.6)/0.29 | ||
| 33.3 (0–100) | 33.3 (0–88.8) | 0.214 | |
| 0 (0–100)/21.1 | 0 (0–100)/14.8 | ||
| 0 (0–100) | 0 (0–66.6) | 0.384 | |
| 0 (0–100) | 0 (0–100) | 0.663 | |
| 0 (0–100) | 0 (0–67) | 0.155 | |
| 11 (7–28) | 11 (7–24) | 0.858 | |
| 22.2 (0–100) | 22.2 (0–78) | 0.511 | |
| 8.3 (0–100) | 0 (0–67) | ||
| 6.38 ± 15.23 | 4.35 ± 15.04 | 0.440 | |
| 75 (0–100) | 58.3 (0–100) | ||
| 66.6 (0–100) | 66.6 (0–100) | 0.926 | |
| 4 (1–12) | 4 (2–12) | 0.165 | |
| 5.34 ± 14.33 | 3.37 ± 12.24 | 0.298 |
Mann-Whitney U test
athe higher values indicate higher level of functioning and quality of life; min: 0, max: 100
bthe higher values indicate a greater severity of symptoms, min: 0, max: 100
Comparison of groups by using Japanese Breast Cancer Society Cosmetic Evaluation Scale (JBCS)
| JBCS Cosmetic Evaluation Score | Group 1 (PM + MLDF) | Group 2 (M + I) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (0.5%)a | 2(3.6%)a | ||
| 85 (45.7%)b | 35(62.5%)a | ||
| 92 (49.5%)b | 15(26.8%)a | ||
| 8 (4.3%)a | 4(7.1%)a |
Chi-Square test was used to compare the two groups