Breast Conserving Surgery and Breast Reconstructive Surgery: De-escalating and Tailoring Surgical Treatment
A special issue of Medicina (ISSN 1648-9144). This special issue belongs to the section "Surgery".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 30 July 2024 | Viewed by 1277
Special Issue Editors
Interests: breast cancer; surgical oncology; breast reconstruction; de-escalation of multidisciplinary breast treatment; general surgery
Interests: breast cancer; breast surgery; general surgery
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Breast cancer is the leading oncological diagnosis in women worldwide, accounting for more than 287,000 cases in 2022. Among multidisciplinary treatment, surgery maintains its leading role in terms of locoregional control, locoregional staging, and risk reduction strategies. However, since the publication of the Milan Trial in 1986, surgical treatment philosophy has shifted from a so-called "maximum tolerable" to a "minimum effective" strategy. Breast-conserving surgery (BCS), as a forerunner, represented the first surgical attempt at de-escalation of surgery, reducing the surgical detrimental effect of patients’ quality of life and patients’ reported outcome (PROM).
In recent years, neoadjuvant chemotherapy, oncoplastic procedure (OPS), and innovative breast reconstruction strategies (e.g., pre-pectoral reconstruction or flap-based reconstruction) overcome the "minimum effective" strategy through the maintenance of breast appearance, providing an opportunity for breast remodeling, enhancing women’s appearance. Finally, innovative technology in breast imaging has provided to breast surgeons an invaluable instrument to design personalized strategies. Under these circumstances, breast surgeons now have a significant number of different strategies to design a real tailored surgical program for each patient.
The present Special Issue will provide an overview of the latest evidence in the field of breast cancer surgery focusing on BCS, oncoplastic surgery, and reconstructive strategy and highlighting their relationship with systemic and other locoregional treatment, and their implications for patients’ quality of life. Therefore, we welcome the submission of case reports, case series, technical notes, review articles, as well as original research papers dealing with oncological outcome or PROM.
Dr. Marco Materazzo
Dr. Maria Rosaria Mastrangeli
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- breast carcinoma in situ
- carcinoma, ductal, breast
- breast neoplasms
- mastectomy, segmental
- mammaplasty
- mastectomy
- surgical flaps
- breast implants
- prepectoral breast reconstruction