Gale Katherine L, Rakha Emad A, Ball Graham, Tan Veronique K, McCulley Stephen J, Macmillan R Douglas
Nottingham, United Kingdom From the Nottingham Breast Institute and the Departments of Pathology and Plastic Surgery, City Hospital; and the Van Geest Cancer Center, School of Science and Technology, Nottingham Trent University.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2015 May;135(5):1263-1275. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000001151.
Currently, there is no clinical evidence of oncologic risk associated with fat grafting, although its safety has been questioned. The authors investigated the risk of relapse associated with fat grafting in women with a history of breast cancer.
Of 328 women with previously treated malignant breast disease who underwent fat grafting at the Nottingham Breast Institute, complete data were available for 211 (invasive carcinoma, n = 184; ductal carcinoma in situ, n = 27). Mean follow-up was 88 months after primary cancer surgery and 32 months after fat grafting. Control subjects were matched 2:1 for date of primary cancer operation (within 2 years), age (within 5 years), type of surgery, tumor histology, estrogen receptor status, and disease-free status by time equivalent to that of fat grafting. Final endpoints were tumor recurrence and death. Outcome results were compared with a systematic review of all patients undergoing fat grafting with adequate follow-up reported in the literature.
No significant excess oncologic events were observed in patients who had fat grafting compared to controls with regard to local (0.95 percent versus 1.90 percent; p = 0.33), regional (0.95 percent versus 0 percent; p = 0.16), and distant recurrences (3.32 percent versus 2.61 percent; p = 0.65). A systematic review identified case series with a total of 1573 women who had fat grafting after primary oncologic breast surgery. The locoregional relapse rate for these patients was 2.92 percent (0.95 percent per year).
This study has found no evidence of increased oncologic risk associated with fat grafting in women previously treated for breast cancer.
CLINICAL QUESTION/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Risk, II.
目前,尚无临床证据表明脂肪移植存在肿瘤学风险,尽管其安全性受到质疑。作者调查了有乳腺癌病史的女性进行脂肪移植后复发的风险。
在诺丁汉乳腺研究所接受脂肪移植的328例曾接受过恶性乳腺疾病治疗的女性中,211例(浸润性癌,n = 184;原位导管癌,n = 27)有完整数据。初次癌症手术后平均随访88个月,脂肪移植后平均随访32个月。根据初次癌症手术日期(2年内)、年龄(5年内)、手术类型、肿瘤组织学、雌激素受体状态和与脂肪移植时间相当的无病状态,按2:1的比例匹配对照受试者。最终终点为肿瘤复发和死亡。将结果与对文献中报道的所有接受脂肪移植且随访充分的患者进行的系统评价结果进行比较。
与对照组相比,接受脂肪移植的患者在局部(0.95%对1.90%;p = 0.33)、区域(0.95%对0%;p = 0.16)和远处复发(3.32%对2.61%;p = 0.65)方面未观察到明显的肿瘤学事件增加。一项系统评价确定了病例系列,共有1573例女性在初次乳腺肿瘤手术后进行了脂肪移植。这些患者的局部区域复发率为2.92%(每年0.95%)。
本研究未发现有乳腺癌病史的女性进行脂肪移植会增加肿瘤学风险的证据。
临床问题/证据水平:风险,II级