Post-Mastectomy Patients in an Urban Safety-Net Hospital: How Do Safety-Net Hospital Breast Reconstruction Rates Compare to National Breast Reconstruction Rates?

Author:

Llaneras Jason1,Klapp Jamie M.1,Boyd J. Brian1,Granzow Joaquin1,Moazzez Ashkan1,Ozao-Choy Junko J.2,Dauphine Christine2,Goldberg Mytien T.1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Minimally Invasive Surgery, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, CA, USA

2. Division of Surgical Oncology, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, CA, USA

Abstract

Background Breast reconstruction (BR) has documented psychological benefits following mastectomy. Yet, racial/ethnic minority groups have lower reported rates of BR. We sought to evaluate the rate, type, and outcome of BR in a racially and ethnically diverse population within a safety-net hospital system. Methods All patients who underwent mastectomy between October 2015 and July 2019 at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center were retrospectively examined. Rates and type of BR were analyzed according to patient characteristics (race/ethnicity, age, and body mass index), smoking status, cancer stage, and presence of diabetes mellitus. Breast reconstruction outcomes were also assessed. Results Of the 259 patients that underwent mastectomy, 87 (33.6%) received BR. Immediate BR was performed in 79 (30.5%) patients and delayed BR in 8 (3.1%). Of the 79 patients with immediate BR, 58 (73.4%) received implant-based BR and 21 (26.5%) autologous tissue. The BR failure rate was 10%, all implant-based. Increasing age and smoking negatively impacted BR rates. Black ( P =.331) and Hispanic ( P =.132) ethnicity were not independent predictors of decreased breast reconstruction. Conclusion This study demonstrated that the rate, type, and quality of BR in this integrated safety-net hospital within a diverse population are comparable to national rates. When made available, historically underrepresented minority patients of Black and Hispanic ethnicity utilize BR.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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