Clinicopathological Predictors of Positive Resection Margins in Breast-Conserving Surgery
-
Published:2024-03-23
Issue:6
Volume:31
Page:3939-3947
-
ISSN:1068-9265
-
Container-title:Annals of Surgical Oncology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Ann Surg Oncol
Author:
Chauhan Hemali,Jiwa Natasha,Nagarajan Vikneswaran Raj,Thiruchelvam Paul,Hogben Katy,Al-Mufti Ragheed,Hadjiminas Dimitri,Shousha Sami,Cutress Ramsey,Ashrafian Hutan,Takats Zoltan,Leff Daniel Richard
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is associated with risk of positive resection margins following breast-conserving surgery (BCS) and subsequent reoperation. Prior reports grossly underestimate the risk of margin positivity with IBC containing a DCIS component (IBC + DCIS) due to patient-level rather than margin-level analysis.
Objective
The aim of this study was to delineate the relative risk of IBC + DCIS compared with pure IBC (without a DCIS component) on margin positivity through detailed margin-level interrogation.
Methods
A single institution, retrospective, observational cohort study was conducted in which pathology databases were evaluated to identify patients who underwent BCS over 5 years (2014–2019). Margin-level interrogation included granular detail into the extent, pathological subtype and grade of disease at each resection margin. Predictors of a positive margin were computed using multivariate regression analysis.
Results
Clinicopathological details were examined from 5454 margins from 909 women. The relative risk of a positive margin with IBC + DCIS versus pure IBC was 8.76 (95% confidence interval [CI] 6.64–11.56) applying UK Association of Breast Surgery guidelines, and 8.44 (95% CI 6.57–10.84) applying the Society of Surgical Oncology/American Society for Radiation Oncology guidelines. Independent predictors of margin positivity included younger patient age (0.033, 95% CI 0.006–0.060), lower specimen weight (0.045, 95% CI 0.020–0.069), multifocality (0.256, 95% CI 0.137–0.376), lymphovascular invasion (0.138, 95% CI 0.068–0.208) and comedonecrosis (0.113, 95% CI 0.040–0.185).
Conclusions
Compared with pure IBC, the relative risk of a positive margin with IBC + DCIS is approximately ninefold, significantly higher than prior estimates. This margin-level methodology is believed to represent the impact of DCIS more accurately on margin positivity in IBC.
Funder
NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference55 articles.
1. National Cancer Registration and Analysis Service PHE. Chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgical tumour resections in England 2013–2016. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/chemotherapy-radiotherapy-and-surgical-tumour-resections-in-england. Accessed 7 Jan 2022.
2. National Collaborating Centre for Cancer. Breast cancer: diagnosis and treatment. https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg81/evidence/needs-assessment-pdf-242246992. Accessed 7 Jan 2022.
3. American Cancer Society. Breast cancer facts and figures 2017–2018. https://www.cancer.org/content/dam/cancer-org/research/cancer-facts-and-statistics/breast-cancer-facts-and-figures/breast-cancer-facts-and-figures-2017-2018.pdf. Accessed 7 Jan 2022.
4. Getting it Right First Time, NHS England. Breast surgery: GIRFT programme national specialty report. https://future.nhs.uk/connect.ti/GIRFTNational/view?objectId=112160613. Accessed 7 Jan 2022.
5. Jeevan R, Cromwell DA, Trivella M, et al. Reoperation rates after breast conserving surgery for breast cancer among women in England: retrospective study of hospital episode statistics. BMJ. 2012;345:e4505.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献