Abstract

Abstract [Background] The development of NSM approach combined with immediate implant-based breast reconstruction (IBBR) for patients with earlystage breast cancer (BC) preserve the natural skin envelope including nipple-areolar complex (NAC) to able to immediately reconstruct the breast with a permanent implant and simultaneously omit the skin expansion with a tissue expander. We retrospectively analyzed the clinical results of NSM+IBBR and compared the complication rate, outcome of patients who underwent immediate (one-stage) or delayed (two-stage) IBBR followed by standard TM or NSM. [Patients and Results] A total of 108 patients who underwent a TM that included SSM or NSM followed by one- or two-stage IBBR between January 2013 and April 2022. 53 patients underwent a total mastectomy (TM) and 32 patients underwent an NSM followed by two-stage IBBR, and 24 patients underwent an NSM followed by one-stage IBBR. The operation times were 236, 247.2, and 321 min, and the mean surgical bleeding was 60.4, 88.8, and 138 ml, respectively. The complications in the three groups included infection (2.7%, 11.1%, and 6.3%), seroma/hematoma (0%, 5.6%, and 6.3%), flap necrosis (2.7%, 11.1%, and 12.5%), and loss of tissue expander or implant (2.7%, 5.6%, and 6.3%), respectively. At the median 62-month follow-up after the NSM + IBBR, one patient was diagnosed with distant lymph node metastases at the 24-month follow-up and one patient had new primary breast cancer within the reconstructed breast at the 38-month follow-up. But no loco-regional recurrence at the NAC or other distant recurrence were detected in the patients undergone regardless TM or NSM + one-stage or two-stage IBBR. [Summary] Our results suggested that the use of one-stage IBRR tended to increase the operating time and the amount of bleeding compared to two-stage IBRR and the complication rate might be higher in cases in which an NSM is followed by IBBR. Oncological outcome was consistent with the studies showing that loco-regional recurrence is less likely at the NAC regardless of whether the patients underwent one-stage or two-stage IBBR following an NSM. Citation Format: Uhi Toh, Yuko Takao, Yuriko Katagiri, Rie Sugihara, Hidetaka Watanabe. Clinical feasibility of nipple sparing mastectomy (NSM) followed by immediate reconstruction based on direct-to-implant technique [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2023 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2023 Dec 5-9; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(9 Suppl):Abstract nr PO3-22-12.

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