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Background: Oncoplastic breast-conserving surgery (OPBS) is the evolution of conventional breast-conserving surgery (CBCS); however, data from studies comparing patients who received two surgical procedures are limited. A comparison of differences in terms of the patient characteristics, tumor-nipple distance, volume of resected breast tissue, tumor volume and postoperative breast appearance between patients undergoing OPBS and CBCS was carried out in this study, enhancing the evidence base for OPBS by widening indications and improving patient satisfaction.
Methods: From January 2020 to April 2022, the Breast Center of West China Hospital conducted a retrospective comparative study involving 106 patients. Preoperative characteristics of patients were recorded, and the tumor-nipple distance, the volume of resected breast tissue, tumor volume and patient-reported esthetic outcomes measured by the Harris cosmetic scale were compared between patients who underwent OPBS and CBCS.
Results: Each group had a median follow-up time of 2 months, ranging from 1 week to 6 months. The tumor-nipple distance was significantly shorter in patients receiving OPBS than in those receiving CBCS (2.98±1.42 3.85±1.78 cm, P=0.006). The rate of positive margin evaluated by intraoperative frozen section biopsy was significantly lower in OPBS group than in CBCS group (2/43, 4.65% 11/63, 17.46%; P=0.048). The maximum diameter of resected tissue (7.80±2.29 6.75±1.87 cm, P=0.011) and volume of resected tissue (74.20±42.77 45.52±30.99 cm, P<0.001) were significantly larger with OPBS. The tumor size, tumor volume (either clinically measured by ultrasound or pathologically measured), tumor location, and reoperation rate due to positive margins did not differ significantly between groups. Moreover, insignificant differences existed regarding patient satisfaction between two groups (87.30% 81.40%).
Conclusions: The OPBS strategy allowed extensive resections and expanded indications with equivalent cosmetic satisfaction and favorable oncological safety.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10721564 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/gs-23-371 | DOI Listing |
Cancer Treat Res Commun
August 2025
Faculty of Medicine, American University of Beirut, 1107 Beirut, Lebanon; Department of Surgery, Division of General Surgery, American University of Beirut, 1107 Beirut, Lebanon. Electronic address:
Background: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) is used to reduce breast cancer size before surgery, allowing for breast conservation surgery (BCS) instead of mastectomy. However, concerns exist about higher positive margins and local recurrence rates.
Aims: This study compared the incidence of positive margins, local recurrence rates, and other oncologic outcomes of BCS performed either upfront or after NACT.
Anal Chim Acta
November 2025
Department of Breast Surgery, General Surgery Center, First Hospital of Jilin University, Changchun, PR China. Electronic address:
Background: Breast-conserving surgery (BCS) is the primary surgical approach for patients with breast cancer. The accurate determination of surgical margins during BCS is critical for patient prognosis; however, time constraints and limitations in current pathological techniques often prevent pathologists from performing this assessment intraoperatively. The inability to reliably assess margins during surgery can lead to incomplete tumor removal and the need for additional surgeries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
September 2025
Department of Radiation Oncology, Washington University School of Medicine in Saint Louis, Saint Louis, MO, USA. Electronic address:
Purpose: This study evaluates the long-term outcomes of single-fraction, high-gradient partial breast irradiation (BreaStBRT) as a post-operative treatment in patients with early-stage, hormone-positive breast cancer. It aims to assess acute and late treatment-related toxicity, cosmesis, patient-reported quality of life (QoL), and oncologic outcomes.
Materials And Methods: Single-institution, single-arm, phase II prospective trial included post-menopausal women ≥50 years old with early-stage, hormone-positive breast cancer treated with breast-conserving therapy (BCT) followed by BreaStBRT.
Surg Oncol
September 2025
Department of Breast Surgery at Northwestern Medical Group, USA.
Importance: Breast-conserving therapy (BCT) results in reoperation in ∼20 % of cases due to positive margins, and a 7-13 % recurrence risk at 5 years persists despite negative margins and radiation. Enhancing margin treatment is critical to reducing local recurrence and improving survival.
Objective: To optimize and evaluate the performance of a Saline-coupled Intraoperative Radiofrequency Ablation (SIRA) device in producing uniform 1 cm ablations in lumpectomy cavities and compare it to prior-generation RFA technology in previous clinical studies.
Eur J Breast Health
September 2025
Network for Hope, Louisville, Kentucky, USA.
Objective: Mastectomy is a widely used surgical intervention for breast cancer in Pakistan, where late-stage diagnoses are common and breast-conserving options are often limited. While effective oncologically, mastectomy can significantly affect a woman's body image, emotional well-being, and social relationships. In Pakistan, sociocultural norms and limited reconstructive services further shape the post-mastectomy experience.
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