1. The Margins’ Challenge: Risk Factors of Residual Disease After Breast Conserving Surgery in Early-stage Breast Cancer
- Author
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PIERO FREGATTI, MARCO GIPPONI, GIULIA ATZORI, RAFFAELE DE ROSA, RAQUEL DIAZ, CHIARA CORNACCHIA, MARCO SPARAVIGNA, ALESSANDRO GARLASCHI, LILIANA BELGIOIA, ALESSANDRA FOZZA, FRANCESCA PITTO, LUCA BONI, EVA BLONDEAUX, FRANCESCA DEPAOLI, FEDERICA MURELLI, SIMONETTA FRANCHELLI, GABRIELE ZOPPOLI, MATTEO LAMBERTINI, and DANIELE FRIEDMAN
- Subjects
Reoperation ,Pharmacology ,Cancer Research ,Carcinoma ,Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast ,intraoperative pathologic examination ,Margins of Excision ,Breast Neoplasms ,excision margin ,Segmental ,Mastectomy, Segmental ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Breast cancer surgery ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Risk Factors ,Ductal ,Humans ,Female ,Breast ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Retrospective Studies ,Mastectomy ,Research Article - Abstract
Background/Aim: Clinicopathological features of patients undergoing margin enlargement after lumpectomy for early breast cancer with positive/close excision margins were analyzed in order to define whether a re-operative procedure could have been avoided. Furthermore, a standardized protocol of specimen orientation was adopted in order to optimize both the widening procedure as well as the oncologic outcome. Patients and Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed including pre-, peri-, and post-operative parameters, and a predictive score by means of a multivariate model was developed using all clinically and statistically significant variables associated with residual disease (RD). Results: RD was significantly related to positive tumor margins, hormone receptor negative, HER2-positive, and tumors with high Ki67 proliferation index (p3, only 2 patients (2.0%) had RD, while in 81 patients with a score ≤3, 55 patients (67.9%) had RD (p
- Published
- 2022
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