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Published in: Annals of Surgical Oncology 11/2018

01-10-2018 | Reconstructive Oncology

Reconstruction in the Metastatic Breast Cancer Patient: Results from the National Cancer Database

Authors: Anna Weiss, MD, Carrie K. Chu, MD, Heather Lin, PhD, Yu Shen, PhD, Simona F. Shaitelman, MD, Patrick Bryan Garvey, MD, FACS, Isabelle Bedrosian, MD, FACS, Gildy V. Babiera, MD, FACS

Published in: Annals of Surgical Oncology | Issue 11/2018

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Abstract

Purpose

Modern treatments are prolonging life for metastatic breast cancer patients. Reconstruction in these patients is controversial. The purpose of this study was to characterize de novo metastatic breast cancer patients who undergo mastectomy and reconstruction and to report complication and survival rates.

Methods

We queried the National Cancer Database for de novo metastatic breast cancer patients, who underwent systemic therapy and mastectomy with reconstruction (R) or without reconstruction (NR) between 2004 and 2013. Patient-tumor characteristics, mortality, and readmissions were compared. Propensity score matched analysis was performed, and survival was calculated using the Kaplan–Meier method.

Results

A total of 8554 patients fulfilled study criteria (n = 980/11.5% R vs. n = 7574/88.5% NR). There was a significant increase in reconstruction rates by year: 5.2% in 2004, 14.3% in 2013 (p < 0.0001). Compared with the NR patients, R patients were younger (mean age 49 vs. 58 years, p < 0.0001), more hormone receptor-positive (76.1% vs. 70.5%, p = 0.0004), had lower grade disease (p = 0.0082), and fewer sites of metastases (85.7% had 1 metastasis; 14.3% had ≥ 2 R vs. 79% had 1; 21% had ≥ 2 NR, p = 0.0002). R patients received more hormonal and chemotherapy than NR but equally received radiation. Median overall survival of the total cohort was 45 months, and median overall survivals of R and NR groups by matched analysis were 56.7 and 55.3 months respectively (p = 0.86). Thirty-day mortality (0.2%-R, 0.3%-NR, p = 0.56) and readmissions (5.9%-R, 5.8%-NR, p = 0.81) were similar; 90-day mortality also was similar (1.1%-R vs. 1.6%-NR, p = 0.796).

Conclusions

There is an increasing trend to reconstruct metastatic breast cancer patients with low complication rates, without survival compromise. Impact on quality of life warrants further assessment.
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Metadata
Title
Reconstruction in the Metastatic Breast Cancer Patient: Results from the National Cancer Database
Authors
Anna Weiss, MD
Carrie K. Chu, MD
Heather Lin, PhD
Yu Shen, PhD
Simona F. Shaitelman, MD
Patrick Bryan Garvey, MD, FACS
Isabelle Bedrosian, MD, FACS
Gildy V. Babiera, MD, FACS
Publication date
01-10-2018
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Annals of Surgical Oncology / Issue 11/2018
Print ISSN: 1068-9265
Electronic ISSN: 1534-4681
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1245/s10434-018-6693-1

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