Erschienen in:
08.12.2023 | Breast Oncology
Patient-Reported Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Lumpectomy With and Without Defect Closure
verfasst von:
Emily Palmquist, MD, Varadan Sevilimedu, MBBS, DrPH, Paula Garcia, MHA, Tiana Le, BS, Xinyi Zhang, BS, Katja Pinker-Domenig, MD, PhD, Matthew G. Hanna, MD, Jonas A. Nelson, MD, MPH, Monica Morrow, MD, Mahmoud El-Tamer, MD
Erschienen in:
Annals of Surgical Oncology
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Ausgabe 3/2024
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Abstract
Background
The effect of lumpectomy defect repair (a level 1 oncoplastic technique) on patient-reported breast satisfaction among patients undergoing lumpectomy has not yet been investigated.
Methods
Patients undergoing lumpectomy at our institution between 2018 and 2020 with or without repair of their lumpectomy defect during index operation, comprised our study population. The BREAST-Q quality-of-life questionnaire was administered preoperatively, and at 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years postoperatively. Satisfaction and quality-of-life domains were compared between those who did and did not have closure of their lumpectomy defect, and compared with surgeon-reported outcomes.
Results
A total of 487 patients met eligibility criteria, 206 (42%) had their partial mastectomy defect repaired by glandular displacement. Median breast volume, as calculated from the mammogram, was smaller in patients undergoing defect closure (826 cm3 vs. 895 cm3, p = 0.006). There were no statistically significant differences in satisfaction with breasts (SABTR), physical well-being of the chest (PWB-CHEST), or psychosocial well-being (PsychWB) scores between the two cohorts at any time point. While patients undergoing defect closure had significantly higher sexual well-being (SexWB) scores compared with no closure (66 vs. 59, p = 0.021), there were no predictors of improvement in SexWB scores over time on multivariable analysis. Patients’ self-reported scores positively correlated with physician-reported outcomes.
Conclusions
Despite a larger lumpectomy-to-breast volume ratio among patients undergoing defect repair, satisfaction was equivalent among those whose defects were or were not repaired at 2 years postsurgery. Defect repair was associated with clinically relevant improvement in patient-reported sexual well-being.