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Breast Cancer Surgery 2004

Breast Cancer Surgery 2004. William A. Barber, M.D. Piedmont Hospital. Breast Cancer Screening. Case Report. 45 y.o patient with two children ages 10 and 13 Mother had breast cancer at age 65 Gail 5 yr risk score 1.7 Undergoes yearly mammograms. CC View of Mammogram May 2001.

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Breast Cancer Surgery 2004

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  1. Breast Cancer Surgery 2004 William A. Barber, M.D. Piedmont Hospital

  2. Breast Cancer Screening

  3. Case Report • 45 y.o patient with two children ages 10 and 13 • Mother had breast cancer at age 65 • Gail 5 yr risk score 1.7 • Undergoes yearly mammograms CC View of Mammogram May 2001 3.5cm Mass Upper Outer Quadrant CC View of Mammogram April 2002

  4. Case Report • US confirmed the existence of 3.5 cm mass • Core biopsy showed a poorly differentiated carcinoma

  5. Diagnosing Breast Cancer: Abnormal Mammograms Benign Appearing Calcifications Suspicious Calcification

  6. Breast Cancer Rules Rule #1: • There is no difference in survival between Mastectomy and Lumpectomy

  7. Breast Cancer Rules Rule #2: • If you have a lumpectomy, you also need Radiation Therapy

  8. Breast Cancer Rules Rule #3: • The operation you chose has nothing to do with whether or not you will need chemotherapy.

  9. Breast Cancer Rules Rule #4: • Most Mastectomy patients do not need Radiation Therapy.

  10. Breast Cancer Rules Rule #5: • If you have a lumpectomy and you have positive lymph nodes, you do NOT need to go back and have a Mastectomy.

  11. Breast Cancer Rules Rule #6: • Whether or not you need chemotherapy is determined by • The size of the primary tumor • How aggressive is the primary tumor • Lymph node status • Age of the patient

  12. Partial Mastectomy (Lumpectomy) Versus Mastectomy How do you chose?

  13. Partial Mastectomy (Lumpectomy) • Contraindications • A. Previous history of Radiation Therapy • B. More than one cancer in same breast • C. Large tumor, small breast, cosmetic deformity • D. Nipple involvement

  14. Surgery Terms • Excisional Biopsy vs. Lumpectomy • Partial Mastectomy vs. Lumpectomy • Incisional Biopsy

  15. Mastectomy Difference between Total (simple) Mastectomy Modified Radical Mastectomy

  16. Skin Sparing Mastectomy • Skin sparing mastectomy preserves the majority of the breast skin and the inframammary fold • The entire nipple and areola are removed

  17. Radical Mastectomy Is Radical Mastectomy still in use? What is it?

  18. Subcutaneous Mastectomy Is Subcutaneous Mastectomy a cancer operation? How does it differ from Total Mastectomy?

  19. Sentinel Node Biopsy • Major advance • Almost no risk of lymphedema • Blue dye • Nuclear medicine

  20. Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy • Quickly becoming the gold standard • May be as accurate or more accurate than ALN dissection while limiting the complications and costs • Involves injection off Technitium-99 sulfur colloid and or 1% isosulfan blue dye • Multiple ongoing trials including B-32 NSABP

  21. Reconstruction Tissue expander Latissimus dorsi TRAM

  22. Reconstruction: Tissue expander Encapsulated silicone implant reconstruction corrected with tissue expansion. The capsule is first excised, and the tissue expander is used to create an oversized pocket for the implant.

  23. Reconstruction: Latissimus Dorsi A, Preop view: 67-YO following MRM. B, Postop view: following left autogenous latissimus reconstruction w/o implant. Opposite breast reduction mammoplasty required for symmetry.

  24. Reconstruction: TRAM A & B, Preop & Postop views following left free TRAM reconstruction. Skin replacement included all skin between scar & inframammary fold. Nipple reconstruction, opposite mastopexy done at separate procedure.

  25. Breast Reconstruction in the Skin Sparing Mastectomy • TRAM flap • Latissimus flap • Implant/Expander • Silicone is preferred and is available on study protocol Tram flap with nipple reconstruction and tatooing

  26. When to Consult? Medical Oncology Radiation Oncology

  27. Chemotherapy What is NeoAdjuvant Chemotherapy? When is it used?

  28. Mammotome Biopsy

  29. Minimally Invasive Excisional Biopsy: Whats New? • Ultrasound guided directional vacuum assisted breast biopsy with 11g and 8g mammotome • Introduced in 1996 these devices use vacuum to draw the tissue into a chamber and a rotating cutter dissects the specimen (Mammotome)

  30. Mammosite

  31. Inserted obturator to prevent bending or coiling of the catheter shaft Radiation source port pathway Multilumen, silicone catheter Variable 4 to 5 cm balloon Needleless injection site

  32. Mammosite

  33. Mammosite Placement Post-lumpectomy Time of Lumpectomy Open Cavity Ultrasound Guided Scar Entry (SET)

  34. CT Image of Mammosite 3-Dimensional rendering of applicator surface

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