Abstract 1837
Background
Positive margin of breast-conserving surgery (BCS) is well known to be a risk factor for ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR). SSO/ASTRO guidelines defined ink on invasive cancer or DCIS as positive margin and recommend considering doing re-excision of the site of positive margin. However, whether re-excision can reduce IBTR has not been fully investigated yet. The aim of this study was to retrospectively assess the oncological impact of re-excision for positive margin status after BCS in invasive breast cancer.
Methods
The subjects were 196 invasive breast cancer patients who underwent BCS, and who were found to have positive margin. Of the 196 patients, 55 underwent re-excision after initial BCS (group A), and 139 did not (group B). We analyzed IBTR free survival in each group and evaluated the predictors for IBTR and overall survival (OS) using Cox proportional hazards modeling.
Results
Of the 196 patients, 188 (96%) underwent adjuvant radiotherapy and 24 of 55 re-excision (43%) identified residual disease. There was no significant difference in 10-year IBTR free survival between group A and group B (94.4% versus 93.8%; P = 0.58). In a multivariate analysis, re-excision was not associated with IBTR and OS, while younger age, lack of adjuvant radiotherapy, and invasive component of margin status were independent predictors of IBTR.
Conclusions
In our retrospective study, re-excision for positive margin after initial BCS in invasive breast cancer does not contribute to prevent IBTR and may not translate into improved OS. Further treatment should be considered when patient was younger and margin status was invasive component.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Kenjiro Jimbo.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1849 - Effect of thioredoxin 1 quantity detection to complement the mammography in breast cancer diagnosis
Presenter: Younju Lee
Session: Poster Display session 2
Resources:
Abstract
2221 - Identification of ultralow risk breast cancer patients (probable overdiagnosis)
Presenter: Salvador Gamez Casado
Session: Poster Display session 2
Resources:
Abstract
5291 - Prevalence of Vitamin D3 deficiency among women with early breast cancer receiving chemotherapy in an oncology dayward.
Presenter: Warner Finstad
Session: Poster Display session 2
Resources:
Abstract
4247 - Changes in ER pathway activity score during neoadjuvant letrozole to assess therapy response and predict disease free survival (DFS) in ER positive breast cancer patients
Presenter: Arran Turnbull
Session: Poster Display session 2
Resources:
Abstract
568 - Second primary malignancies in patients with breast cancer.
Presenter: Carlos Erasun Lecuona
Session: Poster Display session 2
Resources:
Abstract
1428 - Phase II randomized trial of neoadjuvant trastuzumab and pertuzumab (TP) with either palbociclib + letrozole (Pal+L) or paclitaxel (Pac) for elderly patients with estrogen receptor & HER2 positive (ER+/HER2+) Breast Cancer (BC) (International Breast Cancer Study Group IBCSG 55-17, TOUCH)
Presenter: Laura Biganzoli
Session: Poster Display session 2
Resources:
Abstract
1479 - Neoadjuvant HER2-targeted therapy with or without immunotherapy with pembrolizumab (neoHIP): an open label randomized phase 2 trial
Presenter: Heather McArthur
Session: Poster Display session 2
Resources:
Abstract
1481 - A randomized phase 2 study of peri-operative ipilimumab, nivolumab and cryoablation versus standard care in women with residual, early stage/resectable, triple negative breast cancer after standard-of-care neoadjuvant chemotherapy
Presenter: Heather McArthur
Session: Poster Display session 2
Resources:
Abstract
4334 - ALEXANDRA/IMpassion030: A phase 3 study of standard adjuvant chemotherapy with or without atezolizumab in early stage triple negative breast cancer.
Presenter: Michail Ignatiadis
Session: Poster Display session 2
Resources:
Abstract
2107 - Role of Individualized Intervention(s) on Quality of Life (QOL) and Adherence to Adjuvant Endocrine Therapy in Premenopausal Women with Early-Stage Breast Cancer (BC): MyChoice Study
Presenter: Shahid Ahmed
Session: Poster Display session 2
Resources:
Abstract