Breast reconstruction with fat injection: safe in breast cancer

Breast reconstruction with fat injection: safe in breast cancer

29 Jan 2016

For women undergoing breast cancer surgery, a technique called lipofilling, using the patient's own fat cells to optimize the results of breast reconstruction, does not increase the risk of recurrent breast cancer, reports a new study.

"Our controlled study shows that, used as part of breast reconstruction, lipofilling is a safe procedure that does not increase the risk of recurrent or new breast cancers," comments Dr. Steven J. Kronowitz of Kronowitz Plastic Surgery, Houston (formerly of M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, member surgeon of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons and lead author of the new report.

What is lipofilling?

Using a plastic surgery database, the researchers analyzed a series of more than 1,000 partial or total mastectomies followed by breast reconstruction with lipofilling. About 30% of cases involved risk-reducing mastectomy in women at high genetic risk of breast cancer.

Lipofilling is a fat grafting technique that is increasingly used to optimize the cosmetic results of breast reconstruction. But some plastic surgeons may still be reluctant to use lipofilling because of concern that it might affect the risk of primary or recurrent breast cancer.

Rates of recurrent or new breast cancers were then compared with a similar group of women who underwent mastectomy followed by breast reconstruction without lipofilling. In the lipofilling procedure, fat obtained by liposuction from one part of the body -- for example, the abdomen or thighs -- is injected to enhance the appearance of the breast.

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Breast cancer recurrence risk was similar with or without lipofilling

For women who underwent mastectomy for breast cancer, overall recurrence rates were similar for reconstruction with versus without lipofilling. The rate of loco-regional recurrence (in the breast and surrounding area) was not significantly different between groups: 1.3% for women who had lipofilling versus 2.4% in those who did not.

Rates of systemic (distant) cancer recurrence were similar as well: 2.4% with lipofilling versus 3.6% without. None of the women undergoing preventive mastectomy developed initial (primary) breast cancer.

In most patient subgroups, breast cancer recurrence risk was similar with or without lipofilling. The sole exception was women receiving hormone therapy, for whom lipofilling was associated with a small but significant increase in loco-regional recurrence risk: 1.4 versus 0.5%.

“Lipofilling, used as part of breast reconstruction, is a safe procedure”

The new study of breast cancer recurrence risk associated with lipofilling is the first to use a control group of women who underwent breast reconstruction without lipofilling.

The results show no increase in the risk of loco-regional or systemic recurrence in women with breast cancer who undergo breast reconstruction with lipofilling. The study also finds no evidence that lipofilling affects the risk of initial breast cancer for the growing number of high-risk women undergoing "preventive" mastectomy.

"Our results provide new evidence that lipofilling, used as part of breast reconstruction, is a safe procedure that does not increase the risk of recurrent or new breast cancer after mastectomy," Dr. Kronowitz comments. While highlighting the need for further research, the researchers hope their findings will encourage more plastic surgeons to use lipofilling to provide the best possible results of breast reconstruction for their patients undergoing breast cancer surgery.

Source: Science Daily

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