Interrogating a multifactorial model of breast conserving therapy with clinical data.

PLoS One

Methodist Institute for Technology, Innovation and Education, Houston, TX, USA; Department of Surgery, Houston Methodist, Houston, TX, USA.

Published: April 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Early-stage breast cancer can often be treated effectively with breast conserving therapy (BCT), allowing up to 70% of women to undergo lumpectomy instead of complete mastectomy, followed by radiation.
  • Despite this, about 30% of patients experience unsatisfactory breast contour after treatment, highlighting a need for better predictive models.
  • The study aims to understand how various factors like gravity, tissue behavior, inflammation, and healing stress affect cosmetic outcomes, proposing a tailored approach to improve the preservation of breast shape post-lumpectomy.

Article Abstract

Most women with early stage breast cancer do not require removal of the entire breast to treat their cancer; instead, up to 70% of women can be effectively and safely treated by breast conserving therapy (BCT) with surgical removal of the tumor only (lumpectomy) followed by radiation treatment of the remaining breast tissue. Unfortunately, the final contour and cosmesis of the treated breast is suboptimal in approximately 30% of patients. The ability to accurately predict breast contour after BCT for breast cancer could significantly improve patient decision-making regarding the choice of surgery for breast cancer. Our overall hypothesis is that the complex interplay among mechanical forces due to gravity, breast tissue constitutive law distribution, inflammation induced by radiotherapy and internal stress generated by the healing process play a dominant role in determining the success or failure of lumpectomy in preserving the breast contour and cosmesis. We have shown here from a first patient study that even in the idealistic situation of excellent cosmetic outcome this problem requires multiscale modeling. We propose a method to decide which component of the model works best for each phase of healing and what parameters should be considered dominant and patient specific. This patient study is part of a clinical trial registered on ClinicalTrial.gov, identifier NCT02310711.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4408022PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0125006PLOS

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