Abstract

Post-mastectomy pain syndrome (PMPS) is a common and often debilitating condition. The syndrome is defined by chest wall pain unresponsive to standard pain medications and the presence of exquisite point tenderness along the inframammary fold at the site of the T4 and T5 cutaneous intercostal nerve branches as they exit from the chest wall. Pressure at the site triggers and reproduces the patient’s spontaneous or motion-evoked pain. The likely pathogenesis is neuroma formation after injury to the T4 and T5 intercostal nerves during breast surgery. We assessed the rate of long-term resolution of post-mastectomy pain after trigger point injections (2 mL of 1:1 mixture of 0.5% bupivacaine and 4 mg/mL dexamethasone) to relieve neuropathic pain in a prospective single-arm cohort study. Fifty-two women (aged 31–92) who underwent partial mastectomy with reduction mammoplasty or mastectomy with or without reconstruction, and who presented with PMPS were enrolled at the University of California San Francisco Breast Care Center from August 2010 through April 2018. The primary outcome was a long-term resolution of pain, defined as significant or complete relief of pain for greater than 3 months. A total of 91 trigger points were treated with mean follow-up 43.9 months with a 91.2% (83/91) success rate. Among those with a long-term resolution of pain, 60 trigger points (72.3%) required a single injection to achieve long-lasting relief. Perineural infiltration with bupivacaine and dexamethasone is a safe, simple, and effective treatment for PMPS presenting as trigger point pain along the inframammary fold.

Highlights

  • Post-mastectomy pain syndrome (PMPS) is reported to affect 25–60% of women after breast cancer surgery[1]

  • Ninety-one trigger points on 52 patients with PMPS were identified at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) Breast Care Center from August 2010 through April 2018

  • We found that the most frequent surgical procedure that preceded the development of a neuroma was mastectomy, followed by reduction mammoplasty with or without concurrent partial mastectomy

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Summary

Introduction

Post-mastectomy pain syndrome (PMPS) is reported to affect 25–60% of women after breast cancer surgery[1]. Post-surgical pain can occur after any type of breast surgery including partial mastectomy, breast reduction, or axillary surgery[2]. Pain following surgical procedures such as mastectomy and reduction mammoplasty, where tissue is disrupted in the area of the T4 and T5 intercostal nerve sensory branches as they emerge from the chest wall to supply the breast, may have an etiology that is treatable. PMPS is infrequently recognized by surgeons or addressed clinically. Even when it is diagnosed, the majority of patients do not receive effective treatment[3]. Many patients with PMPS are left with debilitating pain and report decreased quality of life[5]

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