Breast Conservation Surgery versus Modified Radical Mastectomy in the Management of Non Metastatic Inflammatory Breast Cancer.

Autor: Elshinawi, Mohamed Elsayed, Eldin Osman, Ahmed Gamal, Abdelmoaty, Karim Fahmy, Abdelatty Anber, Waleed Abdelsalam
Předmět:
Zdroj: QJM: An International Journal of Medicine; 2021 Supplement, Vol. 114, pi145-i145, 1/3p
Abstrakt: Background: Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), the most lethal form of breast cancer, constitutes 1–2% of all breast cancers in the United States. Multimodality therapy is the standard in management of non metastatic inflammatory breast cancer patients including neoadjuvant chemotherapy and endocrine therapy and mastectomy followed by post mastectomy radiation. A modified radical mastectomy has been the standard surgical procedure of choice. The objective of this systematic review and metanalysis is to estimate the pooled benefits and adverse effects of performing modified radical mastectomy versus breast conservation surgery in the management of non metastatic IBC. Objective: To evaluate, review and analyze the outcome of non metastatic IBC patients treated with mastectomy or breast conservation surgery as an integral part of the multimodality treatment of the disease. To highlight the evidence and quality of the included studies. To share in modifying the current guidelines. Methods: An electronic search was conducted from the inception till Jan 2020 in the following bibliographic databases: Medline via PubMed, SCOPUS, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Web of Science, and Google Scholar to identify relevant articles. We used different combinations of the following queries: ("Inflammatory Breast cancer" OR "breast cancer") AND ("Conservative Treatment" [Mesh] OR "conservative surgery" OR "breast conservative surgery" OR "partial mastectomy"). The search have been done with no limit regarding the year publication. Results: After reviewing five studies we found that our results favors the use of modified radical mastectomy over breast conservation surgery in terms of the overall survival and breast cancer specific free survival, however, partial mastectomy could be an effective and safe option in selected group of patients with non metastatic IBC based on the response to NAC an patient’s preference. Conclusions: Breast surgery is of great significance to the clinical outcomes of IBC. Standard mastectomy shouldn’t be the only recommended surgical treatment. Individualized surgical procedures can be safely performed in non-metastatic IBC patients based on the response of NAC and patient’s preference. Background: Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), the most lethal form of breast cancer, constitutes 1–2% of all breast cancers in the United States. Multimodality therapy is the standard in management of non metastatic inflammatory breast cancer patients including neoadjuvant chemotherapy and endocrine therapy and mastectomy followed by post mastectomy radiation. A modified radical mastectomy has been the standard surgical procedure of choice. The objective of this systematic review and metanalysis is to estimate the pooled benefits and adverse effects of performing modified radical mastectomy versus breast conservation surgery in the management of non metastatic IBC. Objective: To evaluate, review and analyze the outcome of non metastatic IBC patients treated with mastectomy or breast conservation surgery as an integral part of the multimodality treatment of the disease. To highlight the evidence and quality of the included studies. To share in modifying the current guidelines. Methods: An electronic search was conducted from the inception till Jan 2020 in the following bibliographic databases: Medline via PubMed, SCOPUS, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Web of Science, and Google Scholar to identify relevant articles. We used different combinations of the following queries: ("Inflammatory Breast cancer" OR "breast cancer") AND ("Conservative Treatment" [Mesh] OR "conservative surgery" OR "breast conservative surgery" OR "partial mastectomy"). The search have been done with no limit regarding the year publication. Results: After reviewing five studies we found that our results favors the use of modified radical mastectomy over breast conservation surgery in terms of the overall survival and breast cancer specific free survival, however, partial mastectomy could be an effective and safe option in selected group of patients with non metastatic IBC based on the response to NAC an patient’s preference. Conclusions: Breast surgery is of great significance to the clinical outcomes of IBC. Standard mastectomy shouldn’t be the only recommended surgical treatment. Individualized surgical procedures can be safely performed in non-metastatic IBC patients based on the response of NAC and patient’s preference. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index