Oncological safety of immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous breast reconstruction in patients with locally advanced disease (stage IIb and III)

Background: The management of locally advanced (Stage IIb and III) breast cancer is challenging. It often includes multimodal treatment with systemic therapy and/or radiation therapy and surgery. Immediate breast reconstruction has not traditionally been performed in these patients. We review the re...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mushtaq Mir, Muddassir Shahdhar, Khurshid Ganaie, Quibtiya Syed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd. 2013-01-01
Series:South Asian Journal of Cancer
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.sajc.org/article.asp?issn=2278-330X;year=2013;volume=2;issue=4;spage=239;epage=242;aulast=Mir
id doaj-7b1e8919f76c452484abc39328b91fd2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7b1e8919f76c452484abc39328b91fd22020-12-02T18:43:09ZengThieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd.South Asian Journal of Cancer2278-330X2278-43062013-01-012423924210.4103/2278-330X.119921Oncological safety of immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous breast reconstruction in patients with locally advanced disease (stage IIb and III)Mushtaq MirMuddassir ShahdharKhurshid GanaieQuibtiya SyedBackground: The management of locally advanced (Stage IIb and III) breast cancer is challenging. It often includes multimodal treatment with systemic therapy and/or radiation therapy and surgery. Immediate breast reconstruction has not traditionally been performed in these patients. We review the results of immediate rectus abdominis musculo-cutaneous (TRAM/VRAM) flap in 60 patients treated for Stage IIb and III breast cancer. Materials and Methods: Data were collected prospectively on 60 patients diagnosed with Stage IIb (32 patients) and Stage III (28 patients) breast cancer between May 2008 and May 2012. All patients had mastectomy and immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous reconstruction (TRAM in 40 patients and VRAM in 20 patients). All patients received primary systemic therapy, and all patients received postoperative radiotherapy to the operative site. Results: Mean age was 40.13 (range 28-53) years, mean hospital stay was 8.86 days and mean follow-up for the group was 28 months. Neither of them developed local disease recurrence in the operative site till the last follow-up. Eight (13.3%) patients had some delay in chemo-radiation therapy due to flap-related complications. Flap-related complications were present in eight patients (partial flap failure in four and superficial skin necrosis in four). There was no adverse effect of chemo-radiation therapy on reconstructed breast. Conclusion: Immediate TRAM/VRAM breast reconstruction for locally advanced breast cancer is not associated with a significant delay in adjuvant therapy or an increased risk of local relapse. Radiation therapy can be delivered to the reconstructed breast when indicated without difficulty. Breast reconstruction facilitates surgical resection of locally advanced breast cancer with primary closure and should be considered if the patient desires immediate breast reconstruction.http://journal.sajc.org/article.asp?issn=2278-330X;year=2013;volume=2;issue=4;spage=239;epage=242;aulast=MirImmediate breast reconstructionrectus abdominis myocutaneous reconstruction; mastectomy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mushtaq Mir
Muddassir Shahdhar
Khurshid Ganaie
Quibtiya Syed
spellingShingle Mushtaq Mir
Muddassir Shahdhar
Khurshid Ganaie
Quibtiya Syed
Oncological safety of immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous breast reconstruction in patients with locally advanced disease (stage IIb and III)
South Asian Journal of Cancer
Immediate breast reconstruction
rectus abdominis myocutaneous reconstruction; mastectomy
author_facet Mushtaq Mir
Muddassir Shahdhar
Khurshid Ganaie
Quibtiya Syed
author_sort Mushtaq Mir
title Oncological safety of immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous breast reconstruction in patients with locally advanced disease (stage IIb and III)
title_short Oncological safety of immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous breast reconstruction in patients with locally advanced disease (stage IIb and III)
title_full Oncological safety of immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous breast reconstruction in patients with locally advanced disease (stage IIb and III)
title_fullStr Oncological safety of immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous breast reconstruction in patients with locally advanced disease (stage IIb and III)
title_full_unstemmed Oncological safety of immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous breast reconstruction in patients with locally advanced disease (stage IIb and III)
title_sort oncological safety of immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous breast reconstruction in patients with locally advanced disease (stage iib and iii)
publisher Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
series South Asian Journal of Cancer
issn 2278-330X
2278-4306
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Background: The management of locally advanced (Stage IIb and III) breast cancer is challenging. It often includes multimodal treatment with systemic therapy and/or radiation therapy and surgery. Immediate breast reconstruction has not traditionally been performed in these patients. We review the results of immediate rectus abdominis musculo-cutaneous (TRAM/VRAM) flap in 60 patients treated for Stage IIb and III breast cancer. Materials and Methods: Data were collected prospectively on 60 patients diagnosed with Stage IIb (32 patients) and Stage III (28 patients) breast cancer between May 2008 and May 2012. All patients had mastectomy and immediate rectus abdominis myocutaneous reconstruction (TRAM in 40 patients and VRAM in 20 patients). All patients received primary systemic therapy, and all patients received postoperative radiotherapy to the operative site. Results: Mean age was 40.13 (range 28-53) years, mean hospital stay was 8.86 days and mean follow-up for the group was 28 months. Neither of them developed local disease recurrence in the operative site till the last follow-up. Eight (13.3%) patients had some delay in chemo-radiation therapy due to flap-related complications. Flap-related complications were present in eight patients (partial flap failure in four and superficial skin necrosis in four). There was no adverse effect of chemo-radiation therapy on reconstructed breast. Conclusion: Immediate TRAM/VRAM breast reconstruction for locally advanced breast cancer is not associated with a significant delay in adjuvant therapy or an increased risk of local relapse. Radiation therapy can be delivered to the reconstructed breast when indicated without difficulty. Breast reconstruction facilitates surgical resection of locally advanced breast cancer with primary closure and should be considered if the patient desires immediate breast reconstruction.
topic Immediate breast reconstruction
rectus abdominis myocutaneous reconstruction; mastectomy
url http://journal.sajc.org/article.asp?issn=2278-330X;year=2013;volume=2;issue=4;spage=239;epage=242;aulast=Mir
work_keys_str_mv AT mushtaqmir oncologicalsafetyofimmediaterectusabdominismyocutaneousbreastreconstructioninpatientswithlocallyadvanceddiseasestageiibandiii
AT muddassirshahdhar oncologicalsafetyofimmediaterectusabdominismyocutaneousbreastreconstructioninpatientswithlocallyadvanceddiseasestageiibandiii
AT khurshidganaie oncologicalsafetyofimmediaterectusabdominismyocutaneousbreastreconstructioninpatientswithlocallyadvanceddiseasestageiibandiii
AT quibtiyasyed oncologicalsafetyofimmediaterectusabdominismyocutaneousbreastreconstructioninpatientswithlocallyadvanceddiseasestageiibandiii
_version_ 1724403199939444736