Objective: This study was designed to investigate the presence of residual breast tissue (RBT) after skin-sparing mastectomy (SSM) and nipple-sparing mastectomy (NSM) and to analyse patient- and therapy-related factors associated with RBT. Skin-sparing mastectomy and NSM are increasingly used surgical procedures. Prospective data on the completeness of breast tissue resection is lacking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Several studies and a meta-analysis showed that fibrin sealant patches reduced lymphatic drainage after various lymphadenectomy procedures. Our goal was to investigate the impact of these patches on drainage after axillary dissection for breast cancer.
Methods: In a phase III superiority trial, we randomized patients undergoing breast-conserving surgery at 14 Swiss sites to receive versus not receive three large TachoSil patches in the dissected axilla.
Solid papillary carcinoma (SPC) is a rare neoplasm of the breast showing a distinct morphology, neuroendocrine differentiation and should be divided into invasive and in situ subtype according to the current 2012 WHO classification of breast tumors. Here, we describe a case of a pure SPC, invasive-type, in a 31-years old female with an associated mammary Paget's disease (MPD) of the nipple showing a rare, CK7-negative immune phenotype, which has not been reported so far. This unusual differential diagnosis should be added to the rare condition of CK7-negative Paget's disease of the breast and complement a new feature to the characterization of SPC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMastectomy rates have significantly increased over the last decades, likely due to the rising trend of risk-reducing mastectomies (RRM) in the treatment and prevention of breast cancer. Growing evidence suggests that aggressive risk-reducing surgical strategies are only justified in high-risk breast cancer situations. Notably, in this selected cohort of women, prophylactic mastectomies offer evident benefit for local and contralateral disease control, and may also provide a survival benefit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Adenoid cystic carcinoma of the breast is a rare neoplasm accounting for 0.1% of all malignant breast tumors and presenting most commonly as a painful breast mass. Compared with the more common histological forms of breast cancer, it has a more favorable prognosis and lymph node involvement or distant metastases seldom occur.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Lactating adenoma is a benign condition, representing the most prevalent breast lesion in pregnant women and during puerperium; in this paper, a case of a woman with lactating adenoma occurring during the first trimester of pregnancy is reported. There have been no reports in the literature, according to our search, focusing on magnetic resonance imaging findings in cases of lactating adenomas. Also the early onset of the lesion during the first trimester of pregnancy is quite unusual and possibly unique.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: nipple dichotomy (or intra-areolar polythelia) is a rare congenital malformation in which one or more supernumerary nipples are located within the same areola.A case of a woman undergoing a central quadrantectomy with a contralateral supernumerary nipple used for reconstruction is reported. No other report in the Literature, according to our search, has focused on reconstructive use of an accessory nipple after breast conserving surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe incidence of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), a noninvasive form of breast cancer, has increased markedly in recent decades, and DCIS now accounts for approximately 20% of breast cancers diagnosed by mammography. Laboratory and patient data suggest that DCIS is a precursor lesion for invasive cancer. Controversy exists with regard to the optimal management of DCIS patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe treatment of breast cancer has undergone continuous and profound changes over the last three decades; breast conservation therapy has been progressively validated as a safe alternative to radical mastectomy for patients with early stage breast cancer. Several large trials have shown that overall survival time of patients treated with conservative surgery and axillary dissection followed by radiation therapy is equivalent to that of patients treated with modified radical mastectomy, with better cosmetic outcomes and acceptable rates of local recurrence. Improvements in diagnostic work-up and the wider diffusion of screening programs have allowed the detection of smaller, often non palpable tumours, furtherly facilitating the widespread use of tumour localization and breast conserving techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConservative surgery has become a well-established alternative to mastectomy in the treatment of breast cancer. However, in case of larger lesions or small-size breasts, the removal of adequate volumes of breast tissue to achieve tumor-free margins and reduce the risk of local relapse may compromise the cosmetic outcome, causing unpleasant results. In order to address this issue, new surgical techniques, so-called oncoplastic techniques, have been introduced in recent years to optimize the efficacy of conservative surgery both in terms of local control and cosmetic results.
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