Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The goal of nipple-sparing mastectomy (NSM) with immediate breast reconstruction is to reconstruct a breast mound with preservation a patient's natural skin envelope. Preservation of the nipple and areola complex during mastectomy and breast reconstruction is associated with improved quality of life and a better cosmetic result. However, this surgical technique relies on tenuous blood supply to maintain the nipple and areola. Therefore a certain proportion of women will actually lose their preserved nipple-areolar complex due to vascular insufficiency. Furthermore, some women may find out after a nipple-sparing mastectomy that cancer had invaded the nipple-areolar complex, and would require another operation to completely remove the cancer. Despite these devastating complications, there have been no controlled studies to investigate mechanisms to reduce the chance of their occurrence.
Our research study will use a pre-operative minor procedure to enhance blood flow to the nipple-areola complex prior to standard nipple sparing mastectomy among eligible women undergoing mastectomy for breast cancer or risk reduction. A secondary objective is to test how many women actually have active cancer in their nipple at the time of this minor surgical procedure, prior to standard NSM. The investigators hypothesize that our innovative and novel nipple-delay procedure will reduce the risk of loss of the nipple due to vascular insufficiency and may be of benefit to identify the small proportion of women with nipple-areola complex involvement, in order to optimize the ultimate cancer ablation.
For this study the investigators propose to undertake a Pilot RCT as the first step in the evaluation of a delay procedure prior to NSM, and the results will be used to determine the feasibility and inform the optimal design for a definitive RCT. This study question has the potential to set a new standard of care in the management of women seeking NSM for the management of their breast cancer.
Full description
The surgical management of breast cancer has evolved over the last few decades, with cancer extirpation becoming less aggressive in parallel with advances in breast reconstruction. Preservation of the nipple-areolar complex (NAC) at time of mastectomy (nipple-sparing mastectomy, NSM), represents a natural progression within reconstructive and surgical oncology to preserve maximum native skin as is oncologically feasible. NSM is associated with improved satisfaction, body image and psychological adjustment. NSM has received increased attention in the lay media, because the ability to preserve the entire breast envelope appeals to patients facing the decision to undergo mastectomy.
Clinician attention regarding NSM has focused on the oncologic implications of the residual breast tissue. Several systematic reviews of prospective and retrospective studies (level II to IV) have concluded that NSM does not impair overall or breast cancer specific survival outcomes compared to skin-sparing mastectomy. This has fostered the adoption of NSM within North America and Europe. The rate of occult NAC involvement ranges from 6 - 30%.
However, the intended purpose of NSM to preserve the NAC may be circumvented if a tenuous sub-dermal blood supply compromises NAC viability. Rates of NAC necrosis are variable, from 0% to nearly 50% of cases 5,6. Few studies explored strategies to prevent this potentially devastating complication. Recent case series employ the use of the surgical delay phenomenon to improve vascular supply and reduce NAC necrosis during NSM 9,10, however this strategy has not been directly compared with standard NSM.
There have been no controlled studies to investigate mechanisms to reduce the chance of potentially devestating complication of NAC necrosis or minimize the clinical impact of occult tumor involvement in the NAC. Because our study is a pilot feasibility study, we have 3 specific rationale to support our design using a pilot study first:
The overarching hypothesis driving the main trial is that patients who are allocated to nipple-delay will have a lower rate of NAC necrosis. Additionally we hypothesize may be of benefit to identify the small proportion of women with nipple-areola complex involvement, in order to optimize the ultimate cancer ablation.
Aim 1: To assess treatment fidelity and acceptability to surgeons of the intervention Hypothesis: This pilot RCT will be acceptable to surgeons, and surgeons will adhere to the treatment group (surgical procedure) to which their patient is randomly allocated. Aim 2: To determine feasibility and acceptability to patients of randomization, treatment uptake and retention and data-collection Hypothesis: This pilot RCT will be feasible to implement and acceptable to patients, and the results will inform planning of the main study. Aim 3: To estimate the proportion of patients in the treatment and control groups that develop NAC necrosis (primary outcome) and a preliminary estimate of the effect of the intervention on NAC necrosis (primary outcome), occult cancer and intra-operative NAC perfusion (secondary outcomes). Hypothesis: This pilot study will provide important information regarding treatment effect estimate and variability (standard deviation) that will be used to guide the design and sample size calculation for the main trial. The overarching hypothesis driving the main trial is that patients who are allocated to nipple-delay will have a lower rate of NAC necrosis.
Pilot outcomes: Treatment fidelity and acceptability to surgeons: We will record the proportion of participants who received their randomly allocated treatment assignment to monitor participant adherence to treatment allocation. We will record reasons why any deviation from study protocol occurred (patient or surgeon-driven), and other organizational barriers to meeting usual care (ex: > 21 days between nipple-delay and NSM for experimental-group patients). Feasibility and acceptability of randomization, treatment allocation and data-collection procedures: Patient recruitment and attrition rates will be recorded. We will measure the proportion of participants that generate complete primary and secondary outcome measurements and baseline questionnaires.
Trial outcomes:
Primary outcome: We will compare the proportion of patients in each group that develop NAC necrosis, defined as necrosis requiring local wound care with dressings or surgical debridement. The proportion of patients in each group that develop total (> 75% of NAC) and partial (25 to 75% of NAC) NAC necrosis will be measured at 2 week and 4 weeks after the definitive NSM procedure by the treating plastic surgeon and surgical oncologist, respectively. We will take photographs to provide objective documentation.
Secondary outcomes:
For the pilot, this study is significant to generate high-quality evidence-based data and to determine the feasibility to undertake and complete a full-scale RCT. The overarching study has the potential to influence clinical practice and is very contemporary in the management of patients undergoing mastectomy for breast cancer or risk reduction. If nipple-delay is effective in reducing the rate of NAC necrosis, then our proposed intervention has the potential to change clinical practice for surgeons who treat women with breast cancer or at high risk for development. Furthermore, the identification of occult malignancy within the NAC prior to planned NSM may contribute to improved cancer outcomes by not sparing the NAC at the time of mastectomy. We hypothesize a positive outcome would engender support within the breast cancer community to uptake an additional stage. Therefore, our proposed study can be used as a model to incorporate level I evidence into the plastic surgery research community, as well as provide robust data to support a change in clinical practice to improve patient outcomes among women undergoing NSM for breast cancer risk-reduction.
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
a. Tumor size < 3cm b. Tumor to nipple distance > 2cm c. Clinically negative lymph nodes d. No skin involvement, inflammatory breast cancer or Paget's disease
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
0 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal