Management of skin-sparing mastectomy: results of a survey of German hospitals.

Standard

Management of skin-sparing mastectomy: results of a survey of German hospitals. / Dian, Darius; Hemminger, Gabriele; Janni, Wolfgang; Friese, Klaus; Jänicke, Fritz.

in: ONKOLOGIE, Jahrgang 29, Nr. 6, 6, 2006, S. 267-270.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Dian, D, Hemminger, G, Janni, W, Friese, K & Jänicke, F 2006, 'Management of skin-sparing mastectomy: results of a survey of German hospitals.', ONKOLOGIE, Jg. 29, Nr. 6, 6, S. 267-270. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16770088?dopt=Citation>

APA

Vancouver

Dian D, Hemminger G, Janni W, Friese K, Jänicke F. Management of skin-sparing mastectomy: results of a survey of German hospitals. ONKOLOGIE. 2006;29(6):267-270. 6.

Bibtex

@article{65fd94fc1a964378abe42ffffae76c4f,
title = "Management of skin-sparing mastectomy: results of a survey of German hospitals.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to evaluate the current management of skin-sparing mastectomy in German hospitals and to determine its oncologic safety. For this purpose, 100 surgeons were surveyed regarding their use of skin-sparing mastectomy. RESULTS: Almost all surveyed hospitals performed skin-sparing mastectomy. Most of them believe that the recurrence rate is equal to that of conventional mastectomy. 95% regard inflammatory cancer as a contraindication to skin-sparing surgery. Most of the hospitals thin out the skin without leaving any macroscopic glandular tissue behind, and 73% leave the nipple-areola complex (NAC) on the basis of frozen sections. Volume replacement is most commonly done with latissimus dorsi muscle flaps and pedicled TRAM flaps. In 76% of the surveyed hospitals, reconstruction after mastectomy is performed by the gynecological department. CONCLUSION: Skin-sparing mastectomy is considered to be the best cosmetic option for breast reconstruction in selected breast cancer patients. At present, statistical proof of its oncologic safety is lacking. The surgical techniques used for skin-sparing mastectomy have not yet been standardized. In order to achieve standardization, careful discussion-making and evaluation remain important.",
author = "Darius Dian and Gabriele Hemminger and Wolfgang Janni and Klaus Friese and Fritz J{\"a}nicke",
year = "2006",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "29",
pages = "267--270",
journal = "ONKOLOGIE",
issn = "0378-584X",
publisher = "S. Karger AG",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Management of skin-sparing mastectomy: results of a survey of German hospitals.

AU - Dian, Darius

AU - Hemminger, Gabriele

AU - Janni, Wolfgang

AU - Friese, Klaus

AU - Jänicke, Fritz

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to evaluate the current management of skin-sparing mastectomy in German hospitals and to determine its oncologic safety. For this purpose, 100 surgeons were surveyed regarding their use of skin-sparing mastectomy. RESULTS: Almost all surveyed hospitals performed skin-sparing mastectomy. Most of them believe that the recurrence rate is equal to that of conventional mastectomy. 95% regard inflammatory cancer as a contraindication to skin-sparing surgery. Most of the hospitals thin out the skin without leaving any macroscopic glandular tissue behind, and 73% leave the nipple-areola complex (NAC) on the basis of frozen sections. Volume replacement is most commonly done with latissimus dorsi muscle flaps and pedicled TRAM flaps. In 76% of the surveyed hospitals, reconstruction after mastectomy is performed by the gynecological department. CONCLUSION: Skin-sparing mastectomy is considered to be the best cosmetic option for breast reconstruction in selected breast cancer patients. At present, statistical proof of its oncologic safety is lacking. The surgical techniques used for skin-sparing mastectomy have not yet been standardized. In order to achieve standardization, careful discussion-making and evaluation remain important.

AB - BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to evaluate the current management of skin-sparing mastectomy in German hospitals and to determine its oncologic safety. For this purpose, 100 surgeons were surveyed regarding their use of skin-sparing mastectomy. RESULTS: Almost all surveyed hospitals performed skin-sparing mastectomy. Most of them believe that the recurrence rate is equal to that of conventional mastectomy. 95% regard inflammatory cancer as a contraindication to skin-sparing surgery. Most of the hospitals thin out the skin without leaving any macroscopic glandular tissue behind, and 73% leave the nipple-areola complex (NAC) on the basis of frozen sections. Volume replacement is most commonly done with latissimus dorsi muscle flaps and pedicled TRAM flaps. In 76% of the surveyed hospitals, reconstruction after mastectomy is performed by the gynecological department. CONCLUSION: Skin-sparing mastectomy is considered to be the best cosmetic option for breast reconstruction in selected breast cancer patients. At present, statistical proof of its oncologic safety is lacking. The surgical techniques used for skin-sparing mastectomy have not yet been standardized. In order to achieve standardization, careful discussion-making and evaluation remain important.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 29

SP - 267

EP - 270

JO - ONKOLOGIE

JF - ONKOLOGIE

SN - 0378-584X

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -