TUESDAY, Jan. 31 (HealthDay News) — Almost one-fourth of women
who opt for breast-conserving surgery instead of mastectomy as an initial
treatment for breast cancer need a second surgery to ensure all of the
cancer cells are removed, a new study says.
New research has found that nearly 23 percent of women undergo a second
procedure (medically known as re-excision), even though surgeons try to
remove a clear “margin” — a thin rim of normal tissue — around the
tumor to catch any stray cancer cells.
Whether too many or too few re-excisions are performed is still
unknown, but the authors found wide variations in re-excision rates around
the United States.
“We don’t yet have the answer as to what serves women best,” said the
study’s lead author, Dr. Laurence McCahill, medical director of surgical
oncology at the Richard J. Lacks Cancer Center and a professor of surgery
at Michigan State University College of Human Medicine, in Grand Rapids.
After surgery, a pathologist tests cells from the margin. If any are
cancerous, this is known as a positive margin. If they’re not cancerous,
it’s a negative margin.
“We do know from other research that positive margins left behind have
a high recurrence rate,” McCahill said. “But, we don’t necessarily know if
re-excision makes a significant difference in outcomes.”
Results of his study are published in the Feb. 1 issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association.
Breast-conserving surgery, also called partial mastectomy, is a very
common choice for initial breast cancer treatment. Surgeons attempt to
leave as much normal breast tissue as possible to preserve the cosmetic
appearance of the breast.
The challenge is that it’s very difficult for surgeons to see what’s
normal tissue and what’s not once a tumor is removed. Dr. Monica Morrow,
chief of the breast service at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in
New York City, said, “You can’t see where the negative margin begins when
you’re in surgery.
“What you take out is based on what you feel is abnormal with a margin
of normal tissue around it. But, the more tissue you take out, the worse
the breast looks,” added Morrow, co-author of an accompanying journal
editorial.
McCahill and his colleagues included data in the study from more than
2,200 women with newly diagnosed invasive breast cancers from four areas
across the country. The women’s information came from medical records
(both in-hospital and outpatient), and surgical, pathology and radiology
reports.
The women’s average age was 62 years, and the majority were white,
according to the study.
Overall, 22.9 percent of the women (509) had to have at least one
additional surgery on the affected breast.
Re-excision can cause additional psychological, physical and economic
stress, according to the study. It can also delay the use of other
therapies, such as radiation or chemotherapy.
Most of the women only needed one re-excision, but about 10 percent
needed two or more, the researchers found. For 8.5 percent of the women, a
total mastectomy was eventually needed.
Re-excision rates were 85.9 percent for initial positive margins; 47.9
percent for a margin of less than 1.0 millimeters (mm); 20.2 percent for
margins of between 1 mm and 1.9 mm; and 6.3 percent for 2-to-2.9 mm
margins, reported the study.
The researchers noted a wide variation in the re-excision rate based on
surgeon and institution, but not based on the number of surgeries a
particular surgeon had performed.
“We shouldn’t have the degree of variations that we demonstrated. We
need to come up with a more acceptable range,” McCahill said. “I think
this should be more standardized. But, the debate about whether or not
just getting a negative margin is good enough has been going on for more
than two decades.”
Morrow said it would be very difficult to set a standard for what a
particular margin in every woman should be, because there are so many
variables at play.
And, she said, she doesn’t think re-excision rates are a good measure
of the quality of surgery you’re getting. “Re-excision rates would be way
down on my list of the things women need to be concerned about,” said
Morrow.
More information
Learn more about breast cancer surgery options from the American Cancer Society.
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