Breast Conservative Surgery: An UpdateHow far should we go?
Dr Christina TY Chan
PYNEH
Halstedian radical mastectomy
Extended radical mastectomy
Modified radical mastectomy
??
NSABP B-04 study:Radical mastectomy
vs Total mastectomy
+ axillary irradiation+/- axillary dissection
In 1970s
Involvement of “part of the breast” only
Quadrantectomy 2
Ablation of tumor with an ample portion of healthy parenchyma 2-3cm margin( Holland principle)
Proposed as far back as the 1930s 1
1 Keynes G. Conservative treatment of cancer of the breast. BMJ 1937;2:643–72 Holland R, Veling SHJ, Mravunac M, et al.: Histologic multifocality of Tis, T1-2 breast carcinomas: implications for clinical trials of breast-conserving surgery. Cancer 1985, 56:979–990.
Breast Conservative Therapy
In 1969
Randomized study at Milan Cancer Institute approved by WHO Committee 1 Radical mastectomy vs Quadrantectomy
Recruitment in 1973
Preliminary data in 1977 2 and 1981 3: equal survival rates
1 Meeting of Investigators for Evaluation of Methods and Diagnosis and Treatment of Breast Cancer: Final Report. Geneva: World Health Organization; 1969.2 Veronesi U, Banfi A, Saccozzi R, et al.: Conservative treatment of breast cancer: a trial in progress at the Cancer Institute in Milan. Cancer 1977, 39:2822–2826.3 Veronesi U, Saccozzi R, Del Vecchio M, et al.: Comparing radical mastectomy with quadrantectomy, axillary dissection, and radiotherapy in patients with small cancers of the breast. N Engl J Med 1981, 305:6–11.
Breast Conservative Therapy
Fisher B, Anderson S, Bryant J, et al.: Twenty-year follow-up of a randomized trial comparing total mastectomy, lumpectomy, and lumpectomy plus irradiation for the treatment of invasive breast cancer. N Engl J Med 2002, 347:1233–1241.
In 1976
Ramdomized study by the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project [NSABP B-06] study group Lumpectomy +/- radiation vs Total mastectomy
Lumpectomy + breast irradiation is appropriate
Breast Conservative Therapy
Breast Conservative Therapy
Phase III clinical trials in US and Europe
Breast Conservative Therapy
National Cancer Institute (NCI) consensus statement 1991:
NIH Consensus Conference. Treatmen to early-stage breast cancer. JAMA 1991;265:391–5
“…..Breast conservation treatment is an appropriate method of primary therapy for the majority of women with Stage I and II breast cancer and is preferable as it provides survival equivalent to total mastectomy and axillary dissection…..”
In 2002, Milan and NSABP1,2
Similar 20-year disease-free and overall survival
1Fisher B, Anderson S, Bryant J, Margolese RG, Deutsch M, Fisher ER et al (2002) Twenty year follow-up of a randomized trial comparing total mastectomy, lumpectomy, and lumpectomy plus irradiation for the treatment of invasive breast cancer. N Engl J Med 347:1233–12412 Veronesi U, Cascinelli N, Mariani L, Greco M, Saccozzi R, Luini A et al (2002) Twenty-year follow-up of a randomized study comparing breast-conserving surgery with radical mas- tectomy for early breast cancer. N Engl J Med 347:1227–1232,
23 - 50% dissatisfaction 1,2
1 A body image scale for us with cancer patient Hopwood P Eur J Cancer 2001:37:189 -972 Cosmetic evaluation of breast conserving treatment for mammary cancer Van limbergen E Radiother Oncol 1989;16:159-67
Irwig L, Bennets A. Quality of life after breast conservation or mastectomy: a systematic review. ANZ J Surg 1997; 67(11):750–4.Moyer et al 1997
Breast Conservative Therapy
Cosmesis
Body Image
Sexual Function Psychosocial
Sound cosmesis Oncological control
Photo x Good BCT
Sound cosmesis
Oncological control
Photo x bad BCT
Munshi A. Kakkar S et al. Factors influencing cosmetic outcome in breast conservation. Clinical Oncology (Royal College of Radiologists). 21(4):285-93, 2009 May.
• Korean paper
Woo Chul Noh et al. Ipsilateral Breast Tumor Recurrence after Breast-conserving Therapy: A Comparison of Quadrantectomy versus Lumpectomy at a Single Institution. World J. Surg. 29, 1001–1006 (2005)
Tumor Margin Volume 1
2 cm 1 cm 34 cc
2 cm 113 cc
4 cm 1 cm 113 cc
2 cm 270 cc
sphere volume = 4/3πr3
10 % volume: cut-off for predicting cosmesis>12 % volume: poor cosmesis 2
1 R. A. Cochrane et al. Cosmesis and satisfaction after breast-conserving surgery correlates with the percentage of breast volume excised. British Journal of Surgery 2003; 90: 1505–15092 Stevenson J, Macmillan RD, Downey S, Renshaw L, Dixon JM. Factors affecting cosmesis after breast conserving surgery. Eur J Cancer 2001; 37(Suppl 5): S31
3.4 x
2.4 x
Quadrandectomy
photo
Lumpectomy
photo
Sound cosmesis
Oncological control
Local recurrence
Consensus ??
Wide variety of practice patterns 1
Survey to more than 1,000 surgeons 2
351 responses
67% Community Surgeons 33% University surgeons
Standard: At least 1 mm distance
Annual local recurrence: 0.2-0.4% 31 Taghian A, Mohiuddin M, Jagsi R, Goldberg S, Ceilley E, Powell S (2005) Current perceptions regarding surgical margin status after breast-conserving therapy: results of a survey. Ann Surg 241:629–6392 Sarah L Blair et al. Attaining Negative Margins in Breast-Conservation Operations: Is There a Consensus among Breast Surgeons? J Am Coll Surg 2009;209:608–613 2 Park CC, Mitsumori M, Nixon A, Recht A, Connolly J, Gelman R et al (2000) Outcome at 8 years after breast-conserving surgery and radiation therapy for invasive breast cancer: influence of margin status and systemic therapy on local recurrence. J Clin Oncol 18:1668–1675
1mm2mm
5mm
10mm
Any negative
2mm
Positive margin
Negative margin
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+x
Close at x mm margin
Singletary SE. Surgical margins in patients with early-stage breast cancer treated with breast conservation therapy. Am J Surg 2002; 184:383–93.
0-7%(median 3%)
3-10%(median 6%)
2-4%(median 2%)
Kotwall et al. Relationship between initial margin status for invasive breast cancer and residual carcinoma after re-excision . The American Surgeon; Apr 2007; 73, 4; ProQuest Medical Library. 337-343
Retrospective review of pathology report invasive ductal CA up to 39mm (n=582) [Exclude DCIS/ ILC]
1st OT: Excisional biopsy or lumpectomy
2nd OT: Lumpectomy or mastectomy
Breast Conservative Therapy
1 Fletcher GH, Shukovsky LJ. The interplay of radiocurability and tolerance in the irradiation of human cancers. J Radiol Electrol Med Nucl 1975;56:383–400.2 Deutsch M. The segmental mastectomy margin: do millimeters matter? Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 1991; 21:521–2.3 Harris JR, Gelman R. What have we learned about risk factors for local recurrence after breast-conserving surgery and irradiation? J Clin Oncol 1994;12:647–9.
Remaining cancers: small, scattered foci, in situ (60%)
>90% eradicated by standard RT (4,500–5,000 cGy) 1
Not mandatory for reexcision2,3
Multifocally/ focally positive or Unknown: re-excision
Sound cosmesis Oncological control
More than enough = better
Conclusion
is what really matters
1 m m