Close Surgical
Margins Predict Risk of Breast Cancer Recurrence
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
A new study published in the International Journal of Radiation/Oncology/Biology/Physics says that cancer cells present after additional surgery for breast cancer may predict whether a woman will see her cancer return.
This year, more than 213,000 American women will learn they have breast cancer. Many women with early stage cancer prefer to have a lumpectomy, where only the cancerous lump is surgically removed, followed by radiation therapy and possibly chemotherapy. With a lumpectomy, the surgeon removes the tumor along with some healthy, non-cancerous tissue nearby. Doctors then examine it under a microscope. If the outside of the tumor, or margin, is free of cancer, it's considered to be a negative margin. If the outside of the tumor has cancer cells present, it's considered a positive margin. When it's unclear, or a very small distance, doctors call it a close margin. Women with a positive or close margin often require more surgery to make sure all the cancer is removed. This surgery is called a re-excision. Most patients with close or positive margins would be advised to undergo re-excision.
In this study conducted at
After 10 years, the number of local recurrences was the same for women who had re-excision and for women who did not have re-excision (group 1 versus groups 2 and 3 together). However, the result of the re-excision helped predict whether women would have their cancer return. Women with no residual disease at the time of re-excision (group 2) had a local control of 95 percent, while women found to have residual disease in the breast (group 3) had a local control of 91 percent.
"This study helps to clarify the role of a re-excision
for a close or positive margin in women undergoing breast-conserving therapy
for early-stage breast cancer," said Derek Chism,
M.D., lead author of the study and a radiation oncologist now practicing at
SOURCE:
International Journal
of Radiation/Oncology/Biology/Physics,