1. Introduction
Since its first description in 1979 [
1], autologous breast reconstruction has evolved as a safe and viable option. More than that, it is now regarded as the international gold-standard in reconstructive breast surgery [
2,
3]. Breast reconstruction was revolutionized in 1989, when Koshima et al. introduced perforator-based reconstruction using the deep inferior epigastric perforator (DIEP) flap [
4], thus significantly reducing donor site morbidity whilst at the same time maximizing clinical outcomes and generating aesthetically pleasing results. Since then, the DIEP flap has emerged as a workhorse in reconstructive breast surgery [
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10].
Currently, breast reconstruction is performed either by plastic surgeons or gynecologists. Both specialties often differ significantly in regard to the reconstructive approach preferred, and no clear international or interdisciplinary guidelines exist to support the decision-making process. While superior results are reported for autologous breast reconstruction in terms of aesthetic and natural outcome, longevity of postoperative results, long-term patient satisfaction and quality of life [
11,
12,
13], implant-based reconstructions are still, by far, the most commonly performed procedure after breast cancer surgery. In fact, rates of autologous reconstruction have continued at a stable, rather than increasing level, for many years [
14,
15,
16].
For various reasons, the introduction of microsurgical breast reconstruction into patient care has yet to gain strong momentum in Germany [
17]. To further improve the standpoint of modern microsurgical reconstructive procedures within interdisciplinary treatment concepts, the German Society of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons (DGPRÄC) introduced a national online registry to underline the structure and quality of care of microsurgical breast reconstruction in Germany.
Using this prospectively maintained free flap breast reconstruction database, the presented study investigated overall complication rates of DIEP flap breast reconstructions in Germany, based on a large patient cohort of 3926 female patients. By demonstrating flap success rates of over ~97%, this study underlines that successful microsurgical breast reconstruction can be achieved on a national level as in Germany, as described in international literature.
2. Materials and Methods
Patient data were obtained from the DGPRÄC national online registry for microsurgical breast reconstructions, including data sets from January 2011–July 2018. Parts of this database have been previously investigated by our study group [
18,
19,
20,
21,
22]. Fritschen et al. have described the purpose and design of the registry in detail [
17]. All elements of the study were performed in accordance with institutional guidelines and regulations. Ethical board approval was obtained prior to study initiation from the Bavarian State Medical Association (156/17 S) and the Berlin Chamber of Physicians (Eth-V-Q/17)). Patient data were entered anonymously.
Data were entered prospectively, sorted and tagged to the individual plastic-surgical department and surgeon. Data acquired included clinical outcome, relevant individual patient parameters and characteristics, as well as prior therapeutic steps such as systemic breast cancer therapy or previous surgery. Intra- and perioperative details as well as data regarding surgical technique were also entered. Outcome was assessed and follow-up data generated up to three months postoperatively.
The database was open to plastic surgical units in Germany. To assure high quality conclusions, only data points from centers previously certified by the DGPRÄC according to specifically defined criteria (
Table 1) were analyzed in the study.
Audit monitoring visits were performed by qualified monitors according to a defined protocol and checklist, in order to ascertain the quality of the entered data in comparison to the hospital’s documentation.
2.1. Patient Cohort
To investigate a homogenous group of breast reconstructions, only female patients receiving uni- or bilateral DIEP flap breast reconstruction were included in this study. Thus, data of 3926 patients and 4577 DIEP flaps were included in this study. The data were generated by a total of 22 plastic surgical centers. Cases were divided into two groups, depending on the experience of the centers with DIEP flap surgery: a high-volume group (≥Ø 40 DIEP flaps performed per year of data entry) vs. a low-volume group (<Ø 40 DIEP flaps performed per year of data entry). Surgical complications were then compared between both groups. The following outcomes were investigated: total flap loss, partial flap loss (10–20% of free flap tissue), unexpected or emergency revision surgery (vascular revision, i.e., arterial and venous thrombosis; wound revision, i.e., infection, hematoma and wound healing disturbances at donor and recipient site) and medical complications.
2.2. Statistical Analysis
Differences between groups were determined using ANOVA or a chi-squared test of independence. Statistical analyses were performed using SAS (Version 9.4, The SAS institute, Cary, NC, USA), and results were considered statistically significant for values of p ≤ 0.05 to guide conclusions.
4. Discussion
Despite the evident advantages of autologous breast reconstruction, it is often underrepresented as treatment of choice for many breast cancer patients. Several reasons might account for this phenomenon: first, autologous breast reconstruction is associated with higher procedural and hospital costs, due to operative time, longer postoperative morbidity and hospital stay, although recent studies found similar long-term total cost of care compared to implant-based reconstruction [
23,
24]. Second, patient awareness and information of the different reconstructive options available plays an important role and may be in need of improvement [
25]. In Germany, the therapy of breast cancer is often integrated into specialized interdisciplinary breast cancer centers, which are most commonly managed by gynecologists. While the certification criteria stipulate that patients must be offered all available reconstructive techniques, by providing plastic-surgical care if needed, implementation into clinical practice still needs significant improvement [
17,
26]. In line with this, Albornoz et al. identified that sociodemographic variables and hospital characteristics may influence the method of breast reconstruction [
27]. Last but not least, gynecologically managed breast cancer centers have doubted the quality of care of microsurgical breast reconstruction in Germany and questioned whether it can meet international standards and outcomes particularly outside of specialized centers in a national setting. While international studies show increasingly good outcome rates after autologous breast reconstructions, reaching excellent levels of an average flap loss rates of up to 3%, [
28] no data existed concerning the situation of care in Germany.
The DGPRÄC online registry was designed to tackle this problem and to shed further light onto the structure and the quality of microsurgical autologous breast reconstruction in Germany. Overall, the presented data show that free DIEP transfer for breast reconstruction is performed under high quality standards over a broad number of centers in Germany, with total and partial flap loss rates as low as 2.0% and 1.1% respectively, and emergent vascular revision surgery being performed in 4.3% of cases. The outcome and complication rates deduced from the national registry compare to recent large-scale international studies and show no significant disparity in this regard [
29,
30,
31,
32]. The study population of Vemula et al. (478 DIEP flaps) showed overall DIEP flap success rates of 98.2% at specialty surgery hospitals and 96.4% at tertiary care facilities [
29]. Unukovych et al. found a reoperation rate of 15.9% in a study population of 503 DIEP flaps. Mirroring our results, flap failure was encountered in 2.0% of cases, while partial flap loss was found in 1.2% of all cases [
30]. Depypere et al. report revision surgery in 5% (48/965) of all DIEP flaps investigated [
31]. The study group of Vanschoonbeek et al. investigated a total of 1330 DIEP free flaps, of which 3.38% required urgent exploration. In accordance with our study results, venous insufficiency was the main reason for the revision of DIEP flaps. The flap failure rate reported was 1.28%, thus being slightly lower than the one presented in this manuscript [
32]. Notably, these studies investigated a study population significantly smaller than the one presented within this manuscript.
The descriptive data and demographical variables of the investigated study population were comparable to international literature. For example, in our study the mean age of patients receiving DIEP flap transfer was 51.3 years, compared to a median age of 51.6 years in the study population investigated by Kamali et al. [
16] and 46.7 years in the study population evaluated by Depypere et al. [
31]. Mean BMI was 26.28 kg/m
2 and therefore slightly higher in comparison to the population investigated Vanschoonbeek et al. (24.9 kg/m
2) [
32] and almost equal to the mean BMI of the study population investigated by Unukovych et al. (26.2 kg/m
2) [
30]. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy was administered in approximately 50% of all cases, complying with numbers found in the studies of Vemula et al. [
29] and Unukovych et al. [
30]. Overall, immediate breast reconstruction (IBR) was performed in ~25% of all cases which seems relatively low compared to the international literature [
14,
33,
34]. Several studies have reported a continuous increase in IBR, which, however, can also be traced back to an increased amount of implant-based immediate breast reconstructions [
35]. Importantly, our data show a significant increase in autologous IBR between the years 2011 and 2018 (
Figure 1;
p < 0.001 between years and type of reconstruction, immediate vs. delayed breast reconstruction).
Compared to international standards, especially in the U.S., LOS was significantly longer in the patient population investigated in this study. While patients after DIEP flap reconstruction stay hospitalized for 3–4 days in the U.S. [
35], we found the LOS in our study to be as high as 8.47 (SD 11.42) days. This complies with findings of Ridic et al. who compared overall LOS in health care systems in the U.S. and Germany. According to their study, the average LOS in Germany is generally much longer than in the United States (12.0 vs. 7.1 days) which can be related to the significantly larger capacity in the number of hospital beds relative to the population [
36]. In addition, the structure of outpatient care and overall remuneration differs largely between the respective healthcare systems, with the DRG-specific medium length of stay being 9.1 days for breast cancer patients receiving microsurgical autologous reconstruction in Germany.
Importantly, when comparing high- vs. low-volume centers, the data presented in this manuscript show a significant reduction of LOS for centers performing more than an average of 40 DIEP flaps annually. Probably, this relates to the significantly earlier postoperative mobilization and shorter operation time by the factor of 0.74 observed in these centers. Unexpectedly, ischemia time was comparable between the HV and LV group, rather than being significantly shorter within the HV group. The data suggest that the reduced operation time could result from significantly quicker and more efficient flap harvest rather than faster microsurgical anastomosis at the recipient site. Additionally, centers performing a lower volume of flaps might have slimmer personnel structures, prohibiting a two-team approach during flap harvest and recipient vessel preparation, thus accounting for prolonged operative times. Surprisingly, while generally being at a low ~2%, flap loss rates were slightly higher in HV-centers. The data provides no conclusive evidence to explain this result, which is why future studies are needed to elaborate on this finding. Albornoz et al. found an inverse relationship between centers immediate autologous breast reconstruction volume and overall complications [
37], specifically with regards to surgery-related complications. Unfortunately, the study group performed no detailed investigation comparing total and partial flap loss, as well as revision rates between groups, which limits comparability to the data presented within this manuscript.
The short follow-up time of three months postoperatively must be considered a limitation of this study. Significant complications, such as donor-site bulge and hernia could thus not be accounted for sufficiently. Studies with an extended follow-up of 12 months or more are needed in order to further define the long-term complications associated with free DIEP flap breast reconstruction.
By publicizing and evaluating data from the DGPRÄC national online registry for microsurgical breast reconstruction, the authors hope to increase visibility and transparency of the standard and quality of care in breast reconstruction. By doing so, and in the best interests of our patients, we aim to improve the cooperation between oncologic and reconstructive surgeons, increase patients’ awareness of the reconstructive measures available and strengthen the role of microsurgical breast reconstruction in breast cancer treatment.