Published December 21, 2010
| Version v1
Journal article
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Nipple-Sparing Mastectomy in 99 Patients With a Mean Follow-up of 5 Years
Authors/Creators
Description
Background. The safety and practicality of nipple-sparing
mastectomy (NSM) are controversial.
Methods. Review of a large breast center's experience
identified 99 women who underwent intended NSM with
subareolar biopsy and breast reconstruction for primary
breast cancer. Outcome was assessed by biopsy status,
postoperative nipple necrosis or removal, cancer recurrence,
and cancer-specific death.
Results. NSM was attempted for invasive cancer (64
breasts, 24 with positive lymph nodes), noninvasive cancer
(35 breasts), and/or contralateral prophylaxis (50 breasts).
Twenty-two nipples (14%) were removed because of
positive subareolar biopsy results (frozen or permanent
section). Seven patients underwent a pre-NSM surgical
delay procedure because of increased risk for nipple
necrosis. Reconstruction used transverse rectus abdominis
myocutaneous flaps (56 breasts), latissimus flaps with
expander (35 breasts), or expander alone (58 breasts). Of
127 retained nipples, 8 (6%) became necrotic and 2 others
(2%) were removed at patient request. There was no nipple
necrosis when NSM was performed after a surgical delay
procedure. At a mean follow-up of 60.2 months, all 3
patients with recurrence had biopsy-proven subareolar
disease and had undergone nipple removal at original
mastectomy. There were no deaths.
Conclusions. Five-year recurrence rate is low when NSM
margins (frozen section and permanent) are negative.
Nipple necrosis can be minimized by incisions that maximize
perfusion of surrounding skin and by avoiding long
flaps. A premastectomy surgical delay procedure improves
nipple survival in high-risk patients. NSM can be performed
safely with all types of breast reconstruction.
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