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Reoperation rate after breast conserving surgery as quality indicator in breast cancer treatment: A reappraisal

Francesca Tamburelli, Furio Maggiorotto, Caterina Marchiò, Davide Balmativola, Angela V. De Magistris, Franziska Kubatzki, Paola Sgandurra, Maria Rosaria Di Virgilio, Daniele Regge, Filippo Montemurro, Marco Gatti, Anna Sapino, Riccardo Ponzone

2020The Breast18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIM: To analyse the role of repeated breast surgery (RBS) after breast conserving surgery (BCS) as a quality indicator in a consecutive series of breast cancer patients. METHODS: Data from 1233 breast cancer patients submitted to BCS from 2015 to 2019 were reviewed. The influence of several variables on RBS rate (182/1232; 14.8%) was examined. Univariate and multivariate analyses were conducted to look for significant associations with the risk of RBS. RESULTS: Surgical workload, BCS rate and clinicopathological variables were consistent over the study period, while RBS rate decreased after the introduction of shaving of cavity margins (from 17.9% to 9.5%). Tumor persistence at RBS was higher for mastectomy vs. re-excision (87.3% vs. 37.8%; p = 0.05), inconclusive vs. positive diagnostic biopsy (48.2% vs. 69.4%; p = 0.003), ductal carcinoma in situ vs. invasive carcinoma (69.0% vs. 51.3%; p = 0.046) and lower after neoadjuvant therapy (14.3% vs. 57.8%; p = 0.044). Several clinicopathological variables were associated with the risk of RBS, but only multifocality [Odds Ratio (OR): 1.8; p = 0.009], microcalcifications (OR: 2.0, p = 0.000), neoadjuvant therapy (OR: 0.4; p = 0.014), pathological intraoperative assessment (OR: 0.6; p = 0.010) and shaving of cavity margins (OR: 0.3; p = 0.000) retained independent value at multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS: RBS rate can be reduced by shaving of cavity margins. Current standards for RBS should not be made more stringent due to the existence of non-actionable risk factors. The value of RBS as a quality indicator should be scrutinzed.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineBreast cancerBreast-conserving surgeryMultivariate analysisDuctal carcinomaOdds ratioMastectomyUnivariate analysisInternal medicineBreast surgeryOncologyBiopsyCancerBreast Cancer Treatment StudiesBreast Implant and ReconstructionBreast Lesions and Carcinomas
Reoperation rate after breast conserving surgery as quality indicator in breast cancer treatment: A reappraisal | Litcius