Abstract

IntroductionAssessment of cardiac function after treatment for breast cancer relies on interval evaluation of ventricular function through echocardiography. Women who undergo mastectomy more frequently choose to undergo breast reconstruction with implant. This could impede assessment of cardiac function in those with left-sided implant. We aimed to examine whether left-sided breast reconstruction with tissue expanders (TE) affect echo image acquisition and quality, possibly affecting clinical decision-making.MethodsA retrospective case-control study was conducted in 190 female breast cancer patients who had undergone breast reconstruction with TE at an urban academic center. Echocardiographic technical assessment and image quality were respectively classified as excellent/good or adequate/technically difficult by technicians; and excellent/good or adequate/poor by 2 board-certified cardiologist readers. Likelihood ratio was used to test multivariate associations between image quality and left-sided TE.ResultsWe identified 32 women (81.3% white; mean age 48 years) with left-sided/bilateral TE, and 158 right-sided/no TE (76.6% white, mean age 57 years). In multivariable analyses, we found a statistically significant difference in technician-assessed difficulty in image acquisition between cases and controls (p = 0.01); but no differences in physician-assessed image quality between cases and controls (p = 0.09, Pearson’s r = 0.467).ConclusionsLeft-sided breast TE appears to affect the technical difficulty of echo image acquisition, but not physician-assessed echo image quality. This likely means that echo technicians absorb most of the impediments associated with imaging patients with breast TE such that the presence of TE has no bearing on downstream clinical decision-making associated with echo image quality.

Highlights

  • Assessment of cardiac function after treatment for breast cancer relies on interval evaluation of ventricular function through echocardiography

  • We found a statistically significant difference in technician-assessed difficulty in image acquisition between cases and controls (p = 0.01); but no differences in physician-assessed image quality between cases and controls (p = 0.09, Pearson’s r = 0.467)

  • Left-sided breast tissue expanders (TE) appears to affect the technical difficulty of echo image acquisition, but not physician-assessed echo image quality

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Summary

Introduction

Assessment of cardiac function after treatment for breast cancer relies on interval evaluation of ventricular function through echocardiography. Women who undergo mastectomy more frequently choose to undergo breast reconstruction with implant. This could impede assessment of cardiac function in those with leftsided implant. Women undergo mastectomy [4], either because of personal preference, hereditary predisposition to breast cancer or (2019) 5:17 because magnetic resonance imaging detects multicentric disease. There is extensive research that relies on echocardiography (echo) and other cardiac imaging modalities to determine early markers of cardiotoxicity in cancer survivors [6, 7]. Different guidelines have different intervals for cardiac assessment via echo in cancer survivors that can range from 6 to 18 months after the last chemotherapy [8,9,10]

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