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Innovations for the future of breast surgery

Innovations for the future of breast surgery
Innovations for the future of breast surgery
Background: Future innovations in science and technology with an impact on multimodal breast cancer management from a surgical perspective are discussed in this narrative review. The work was undertaken in response to the Commission on the Future of Surgery project initiated by the Royal College of Surgeons of England.
Methods: Expert opinion was sought around themes of surgical de-escalation, reduction in treatment morbidities, and improving the accuracy of breast-conserving surgery in terms of margin status. There was emphasis on how the primacy of surgical excision in an era of oncoplastic and reconstructive surgery is increasingly being challenged, with more effective systemic therapies that target residual disease burden, and permit response-adapted approaches to both breast and axillary surgery.
Results: Technologies for intraoperative margin assessment can potentially half re-excision rates after breast-conserving surgery, and sentinel lymph node biopsy will become a therapeutic procedure for many patients with node-positive disease treated either with surgery or chemotherapy as the primary modality. Genomic profiling of tumours can aid in the selection of patients for neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies as well as prevention strategies. Molecular subtypes are predictive of response to induction therapies and reductive approaches to surgery in the breast or axilla.
Conclusion: Treatments are increasingly being tailored and based on improved understanding of tumour biology and relevant biomarkers to determine absolute benefit and permit delivery of cost-effective healthcare. Patient involvement is crucial for breast cancer studies to ensure relevance and outcome measures that are objective, meaningful, and patient-centred.
Breast Neoplasms/surgery, Female, Forecasting, Humans, Mastectomy, Segmental/methods
0007-1323
908-916
Vidya, R
1c673dfa-cc28-4a39-a536-aebec7c52627
Leff, D R
e67ecfd6-431c-419d-a36b-7615a19b2a15
Green, M
f5c9fa40-be8f-4130-bf31-7bdf999f53bb
McIntosh, S A
ecefb5c6-401e-4447-9eff-3da20e80218e
St John, E
cd3c6ea2-6191-407b-af91-435656790a79
Kirwan, C C
ce33b6cf-d463-4825-baea-2bfe718b85c3
Romics, L
8ef8003c-94d2-4da1-9bc0-5a870f81140e
Cutress, R I
68ae4f86-e8cf-411f-a335-cdba51797406
Potter, S
bfe8461d-7483-4151-820e-47dbba3e90a4
Carmichael, A
635e21e4-e570-449c-b68b-56de9fa5287b
Subramanian, A
43bf0cfc-6b86-4665-9939-71546ba3605d
O'Connell, R
e0d4a241-e8b1-4759-82f3-d683d74d4c3b
Fairbrother, P
98011ec5-de17-478a-9df6-1fae2622f930
Fenlon, D
4ce9bc0f-28f7-4c68-995e-692294a9f1bd
Benson, J
a79f53ea-8410-4107-8615-aa57c638052d
Holcombe, C
e10e54d6-3370-45be-a43f-59a381f4391c
et al.
Vidya, R
1c673dfa-cc28-4a39-a536-aebec7c52627
Leff, D R
e67ecfd6-431c-419d-a36b-7615a19b2a15
Green, M
f5c9fa40-be8f-4130-bf31-7bdf999f53bb
McIntosh, S A
ecefb5c6-401e-4447-9eff-3da20e80218e
St John, E
cd3c6ea2-6191-407b-af91-435656790a79
Kirwan, C C
ce33b6cf-d463-4825-baea-2bfe718b85c3
Romics, L
8ef8003c-94d2-4da1-9bc0-5a870f81140e
Cutress, R I
68ae4f86-e8cf-411f-a335-cdba51797406
Potter, S
bfe8461d-7483-4151-820e-47dbba3e90a4
Carmichael, A
635e21e4-e570-449c-b68b-56de9fa5287b
Subramanian, A
43bf0cfc-6b86-4665-9939-71546ba3605d
O'Connell, R
e0d4a241-e8b1-4759-82f3-d683d74d4c3b
Fairbrother, P
98011ec5-de17-478a-9df6-1fae2622f930
Fenlon, D
4ce9bc0f-28f7-4c68-995e-692294a9f1bd
Benson, J
a79f53ea-8410-4107-8615-aa57c638052d
Holcombe, C
e10e54d6-3370-45be-a43f-59a381f4391c

Vidya, R, Leff, D R, Green, M, Cutress, R I, Carmichael, A and Subramanian, A , et al. (2021) Innovations for the future of breast surgery. British Journal of Surgery, 108 (8), 908-916. (doi:10.1093/bjs/znab147).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Background: Future innovations in science and technology with an impact on multimodal breast cancer management from a surgical perspective are discussed in this narrative review. The work was undertaken in response to the Commission on the Future of Surgery project initiated by the Royal College of Surgeons of England.
Methods: Expert opinion was sought around themes of surgical de-escalation, reduction in treatment morbidities, and improving the accuracy of breast-conserving surgery in terms of margin status. There was emphasis on how the primacy of surgical excision in an era of oncoplastic and reconstructive surgery is increasingly being challenged, with more effective systemic therapies that target residual disease burden, and permit response-adapted approaches to both breast and axillary surgery.
Results: Technologies for intraoperative margin assessment can potentially half re-excision rates after breast-conserving surgery, and sentinel lymph node biopsy will become a therapeutic procedure for many patients with node-positive disease treated either with surgery or chemotherapy as the primary modality. Genomic profiling of tumours can aid in the selection of patients for neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies as well as prevention strategies. Molecular subtypes are predictive of response to induction therapies and reductive approaches to surgery in the breast or axilla.
Conclusion: Treatments are increasingly being tailored and based on improved understanding of tumour biology and relevant biomarkers to determine absolute benefit and permit delivery of cost-effective healthcare. Patient involvement is crucial for breast cancer studies to ensure relevance and outcome measures that are objective, meaningful, and patient-centred.

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More information

Published date: 19 August 2021
Additional Information: © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.
Keywords: Breast Neoplasms/surgery, Female, Forecasting, Humans, Mastectomy, Segmental/methods

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475641
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475641
ISSN: 0007-1323
PURE UUID: 9213ac24-a74c-4b97-bd8d-461f44a385f3

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Date deposited: 23 Mar 2023 17:36
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 23:45

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Contributors

Author: R Vidya
Author: D R Leff
Author: M Green
Author: S A McIntosh
Author: E St John
Author: C C Kirwan
Author: L Romics
Author: R I Cutress
Author: S Potter
Author: A Carmichael
Author: A Subramanian
Author: R O'Connell
Author: P Fairbrother
Author: D Fenlon
Author: J Benson
Author: C Holcombe
Corporate Author: et al.

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