Artigo

Oncological outcomes of breast conserving surgery versus mastectomy following neoadjuvant chemotherapy in a contemporary multicenter cohort

Autor(es): Francisco Pimentel Cavalcante 1,2, Felipe Pereira Zerwes 3, Ryane Alcantara 1, Eduardo Camargo Millen 4, Andre Mattar 5, Marcelo Antonini 6, Anne Dominique Nascimento Lima 7, José Bines 8, Fabrício Palermo Brenelli 9, Guilherme Garcia Novita 10, Anastacio Berretini Junior 11, Rafael Henrique Szymanski Machado 12, Alessandra Borba Anton DE SOUZA 3, Danielle Calheiros Campelo 13, Rene Aloisio da Costa Vieira 2,14 & Antônio Luiz Frasson

RESUME

To evaluate local recurrence (LR), distant recurrence (DR) and death in non-metastatic patients undergoing breast-conserving surgery (BCS) or mastectomy following current neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) regimens. Patients submitted to NAC in 2013–2023 were evaluated (n = 365; mastectomy: 165; BCS: 200). More mastectomy patients were over 70 years old (12.7% versus 7%; p = 0.02) and had T4b tumors (16.4% versus 4.5%; p = 0.0003), whereas more BCS patients had nodenegative axilla (42% versus 31.5%; p = 0.02). After a mean follow-up of 65 months (range: 4-124), LR and DR were similar in the mastectomy and BCS groups (4.8% versus 5.0%; p = 0.95 and 10.9% versus 9%; p = 0.58, respectively). More deaths occurred in the mastectomy group (8.5% versus 3%; p = 0.03). Ten-year LR-free survival was higher in the BCS group (98.5% versus 95%; HR: 3.41; 1.09–10.64; p = 0.03), while 10-year DR-free survival was similar in both groups (91% BCS versus 89% mastectomy, HR: 1.25; 0.65–2.42; p = 0.4). Overall survival was better in the BCS group (97% versus 91.5%; HR: 2.62; 1.06–6.69; p = 0.03). Estimated 10-year disease-free survival, stratified according to tumor stage, showed no significant difference except for T4 disease, for which the risk was greater in the mastectomy group (94.5% versus 81.8%; HR: 2.86, 1.54–5.30, p = 0.0008). In the multivariate analysis, T3/T4 staging (OR: 4.37, 1.03–21.91; p = 0.04) and axillary dissection (OR: 5.11, 1.14–35.52; p = 0.04)
were associated with LR in the BCS group. In this cohort of patients receiving contemporary NAC, BCS proved to be a safe alternative to mastectomy following treatment with NAC, even in cases of locally advanced BC.

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Kit-MKT-BSGAvatar
BSG
16/03/2025

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