Breast-Sparing Operations Often Mean More Surgery Later - East Idaho News
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Breast-Sparing Operations Often Mean More Surgery Later

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Getty 091211 BreastCancer?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1342184594880Comstock/Thinkstock(NEW YORK) — Partial breast removal surgery to treat cancer is not likely to be a one-time operation, according to many breast cancer experts and a study released Thursday.

One in five women who opt for partial breast removal, or breast-conserving surgery, may need a second operation to remove more breast tissue, according to a study of more than 55,000 British women.

Repeat surgery rates may be slightly higher among American women — about one in four — according to a study published last February in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Breast-conserving surgery, including lumpectomy and partial mastectomy, is a less radical form of cancer surgery that seeks to remove the localized tumor or cancerous tissue within the breast.  Additional surgeries are often performed when the doctors find additional tumors, or if the disease has spread to nearby lymph nodes.  

Regarding breast-conserving surgery as a one-time fix may lead some surgeons to remove too much breast tissue the first time, or even to overlook the need to perform additional surgery.  Instead, the goal for both patients and surgeons is to find the clear margins of the cancer, which may take more than one try, many experts said.

British researchers looked at data collected from the Hospital Episode Statistics database of more than 55,000 women ages 16 and older who underwent breast-conserving surgery between 2005 and 2008.

Twenty percent of the women underwent additional surgery, and 40 percent of those who had repeat surgeries underwent a mastectomy, according to the findings that were published Thursday in the British Medical Journal.

The women were nearly twice as likely to undergo additional surgery if the tumor was ductal carcinoma in situ, an early localized form of the cancer in which it may be harder to detect the boundaries of the disease.

“The only way to be guaranteed a single surgical procedure with breast cancer is to perform the largest operation we perform — mastectomy with complete auxiliary lymph node removal,” said Dr. Ben Anderson, director of the breast health clinic at the University of Washington.  

Still, many experts said that despite the findings, they would not recommend mastectomy over lumpectomy or partial mastectomy.

“The breast cancer survival rates are no different between women who undergo lumpectomy followed by radiation versus women who undergo mastectomy,” said Dr. Keith Amos, assistant professor of surgery at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.  “I counsel each patient before a lumpectomy that obtaining clear margins may require more than one operation.”.

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