Breast Cancer Treatment Options: Surgery
Surgery is the most common treatment for breast cancer. There are two main objectives
for surgery. The first is to remove the tumor and the second is to evaluate the
lymph nodes to determine if the cancer has spread.
Removing the Tumor
There are two types of surgery to remove the cancer, Lumpectomy and Mastectomy:
Lumpectomy
This operation saves as much of your breast as possible by removing only the lump
plus a surrounding area of normal tissue. This is an outpatient procedure so you
are home the same day. The survival rate for lumpectomy is the same as for mastectomy
where the whole breast is removedHowever, the chances of the cancer coming back
in the breast after a lumpectomy alone is 39.2%. You can reduce the chances of the
cancer coming back in the breast after a lumpectomy by having radiation therapy.
With radiation, the chances of the cancer coming back in the breast is 14.3%. This
is why radiation is critical after a lumpectomy. You will have radiation 5 days
a week for 6 weeks. In general, each treatment is short (about 15 minutes), but
you must commit to having radiation therapy if you want to have a lumpectomy.
Lumpectomy may not be an option if you:
- have already had radiation therapy;
- have two or more areas of cancer in the same breast that are far apart;
- have a connective tissue disease that makes you sensitive to radiation.
Mastectomy
Mastectomy means your surgeon will remove all your breast tissue - the lobules,
ducts, fatty tissue and a strip of skin with the nipple and areola. You have a 5
percent chance of recurrence with a mastectomy. There are two types of mastectomy:
- Conventional mastectomy means your surgeon will remove your entire breast.
You usually are in the hospital overnight for one day. You will be flat-chested
after this procedure, but can wear a prosthesis or have delayed reconstruction.
- Skin-sparing mastectomy is a mastectomy where your surgeon carves out the
breast tissue much like you carve out a cantaloupe through a small incision around
the areola, leaving the skin behind. This creates an envelope for the plastic surgeon
to then "stuff." The envelope retains the same shape as your breast. The cosmetic
results of this operation are very good (see image below), however this is an all-day
procedure. You are in the hospital about four days, and it takes a couple of weeks
to recover. Both skin-sparing and conventional mastectomy have the same survival
and local recurrence rates.
Evaluating the Nodes
The second main objective of surgery (after removing the tumor) is to evaluate the
lymph nodes. The surgeon does this for two main reasons. The first is that knowing
whether the cancer has spread to the lymph nodes tells us about how aggressive the
cancer is, and will affect the treatment you receive. This is called staging. The
other reason is that if there is cancer in the lymph nodes, we need to treat that
cancer to prevent it from growing.
In the past, we could only evaluate the lymph nodes by removing them all. However,
this procedure (called an axillary node dissection) has a lot of potential side
effects...80% of people will have some numbness under their arm, 15% of people may
have some swelling of their arm, and 9% of people may have some decreased range
of motion of their shoulder. Taking out all of the lymph nodes does not improve
your survival - especially if none of them have cancer.
Today, physicians are using a new procedure called Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy, which
concentrates on locating the sentinel nodes - the first nodes to receive the drainage
from breast tumors. Evaluating the sentinel lymph nodes is like looking at the foyer
of a house. To enter a house, you must pass through the foyer first. Similarly,
for cancer to spread to the rest of the lymph nodes in the armpit, it must pass
through the sentinel nodes first. If the foyer is very clean, it is very unlikely
that someone tracked mud to the rest of the house (unless of course they jumped
over the foyer - which is pretty unlikely!). So if there is no cancer detected in
the sentinel nodes, it is very unlikely (<5%) that there is cancer in the remaining
lymph nodes and therefore you do not need to have all of the nodes removed. However,
if there is mud in the foyer, there might be mud in other parts of the house. Like
the mud in the foyer, if breast cancer is going to spread, it will first spread
to the lymph nodes under the arm. So if the sentinel lymph node has cancer cells
in it, it is possible that there may be cancer in the remaining nodes. In general,
your surgeon will remove the remaining nodes to see whether there is any cancer
there and also "to clean the house."
The side effects of sentinel node biopsy include blue urine for a couple of days,
skin that is temporarily stained blue because of the dye used in the procedure and
in less than 1 percent, an allergic reaction.
There is a clinical trial to determine whether surgeons really need to remove all
the lymph nodes to clean up the entire house or if radiation will work instead.
For more information on this clinical trial and others,
click here.
If the cancer has spread
If your cancer has spread beyond your breast to other organs, such as your bones,
lungs or liver, it may not be possible to eliminate the cancer at this stage. However,
its spread may be controlled with chemotherapy, hormonal therapy or both.
Reconstructive surgery
If reconstruction is an option, your surgeon will refer you to a plastic surgeon
who will describe the procedures to you and show you photos of women who have had
different types of reconstruction. Your options will include reconstruction with
a synthetic breast implant or reconstruction using your own tissue to rebuild your
breast. These operations can be performed at the time of your mastectomy or later.
Reconstruction with implants: Using artificial materials to reconstruct your
breast entails implanting a silicone shell filled with saline. If you do not have
enough muscle and skin to cover an implant, your physician may use a tissue expander,
which is an empty implant shell that inflates as fluid is injected. The expander
is placed under your skin and muscle, and your physician gradually fills it with
fluid - usually over a period of several months. When your muscle and skin have
stretched enough, the expander is removed and replaced with a permanent implant.
Recovery may take several weeks. Usually, an implant makes your breast firmer than
a normal breast. Implants may cause pain, swelling, bruising, tenderness or infection.
They age over time, requiring replacement. They can rupture, deflate and shift over
time.
Reconstruction with a TRAM flap: Transverse rectus abdominis myocutaneous
(TRAM) flap surgery reconstructs your breast using tissue, including fat and muscle,
from your abdomen giving you a tummy tuck. The reconstructed breast looks and feels
more natural than an implant, and is permanent.. If you have little body fat, are
a smoker, or have had previous abdominal surgery, this type of reconstruction may
not be an option for you - check with your plastic surgeon. This is a bigger surgery
than implants, and you may experience pain, infection and tummy weakness.. Latissimus
Dorsi Flap. This procedure uses muscle from the back and rotates it around to the
chest wall to make a breast. It can be combined with an implant.
Reconstruction of your nipple and areola: Once the breast has been reconstructed,
you may have further surgery to make a nipple and areola. This is a minor procedure,
where your surgeon first creates a small mound to resemble a nipple, and then tattoos
the skin around the nipple to create an areola.
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