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Surgery for Inflammatory Breast Cancer: How and Why
1. Faina Nakhlis
Division of Surgical Oncology
Dana Farber Cancer Institute
1st Annual IBC Patient Forum
May 13, 2017
Surgery for Inflammatory Breast Cancer (IBC):
How and Why
3. Initial Evaluation
Peau d’orange (dermal lymphatic invasion)
Unresectable disease
1. Neoadjuvant systemic therapy for cytoreduction
2. Modified radical mastectomy
3. Chest wall and regional nodal radiotherapy*
*Morris, Journal of Surgical Oncology 1983; Dawood et al. Annals of Oncology 2011
4. What is the Role of Surgery in IBC
Survival in 28 patients with IBC (23 patients with stage III disease) with and without surgery, 1969-1980
Hagelberg, Jolly, Anderson, Am Journal of Surgery 1984
5. What is the Role of Surgery in IBC
Recurrence and survival in 107 patients with IBC with and without surgery, 1958-1985
Fields et al, Cancer 1989
Multivariate Analysis
6. What is the Role of Surgery in IBC
Response to chemotherapy, receipt of surgery and outcomes in 178 IBC patients
1974-1993, median follow-up 89 months (22-223 months)
Fleming et al, Ann Surg Oncol 1989
7. What is a Modified Radical Mastectomy
Mastectomy (total, simple) + Axillary lymph node dissection
11. Why Should Immediate Reconstruction Not Be Done in IBC?
The amount of involved skin can go beyond what is clinically visible
12. Patterns of Breast Reconstruction in Patients Diagnosed with
Inflammatory Breast Cancer: the Dana Farber Cancer
Institute’s Inflammatory Breast Cancer Program Experience
F. Nakhlis, M.M. Regan, Y.S. Chun, L.S. Dominici, J.R. Bellon, L.
Warren, E.D. Yeh, H.A. Jacene, K. Hirko, A. Hazra, J Hirshfield-
Bartek, T. A. King, B. Overmoyer
SABCS 2015 Poster
13. Background
• Immediate reconstruction is not advised in IBC patients due to lack of
safety data for skin-sparing mastectomy
• Data on breast reconstruction outcomes in IBC patients are scant
• Our experience with breast reconstruction in IBC patients was
reviewed
14. Methods
• Retrospective analysis of IRB-approved DFCI IBC database
• Patients included in the analysis
• Stage III IBC
• Sufficient response to preoperative chemotherapy to achieve resectability
• No preoperative radiotherapy
• No loco-regional progression or distant metastasis during preoperative
chemotherapy
15. Results
Stage III IBC patients*
(1997-2014), n=167
Immediate
reconstruction,
n=12
Delayed
reconstruction,
n=18
No reconstruction,
n=135
*In two patients breast reconstruction took place but no information about reconstruction details
and follow-up is available
16. Immediate Reconstruction, n=12*
Reconstructive Option Number of Patients
Tissue expander 3
Single stage implant 3
DIEP flap 1
TRAM flap 4
Latissimus Dorsi flap 1
*Eleven out of 12 patients with immediate reconstruction underwent surgery outside of DFCI
17. Delayed Reconstruction, n=18
Reconstructive Option Number of Patients
Tissue expander 1
TRAM flap 9
DIEP flap 5
Latissimus Dorsi and tissue expander 1
Latissimus Dorsi flap 2
18. Complications After Delayed Reconstruction
Complication
Delayed Reconstruction
(N=18)
Reoperation for flap donor
site wound dehiscence
1 (6%)
Reconstruction loss 1 (6%)
Total Complications 2 (12%)
19. Future Direction
• Exploration of the role of local therapy (surgery and radiation) in stage IV IBC
•Axillary and extra-axillary lymphatic drainage in IBC and the potential for
sentinel node mapping