Guideline-concordant surgical care for lobular versus ductal inflammatory breast cancer Miscellaneous


Authors: Iwai, Y.; Perez-Rojas, S.; Thomas, S. M.; Tadros, A. B.; Woodward, S. G.; Zhang, J. Q.; Elmore, L. C.; Freedman, G. M.; Tchou, J. C.; Bleznak, A. D.; Fayanju, O. M.
Title: Guideline-concordant surgical care for lobular versus ductal inflammatory breast cancer
Abstract: Introduction: Quality of surgical care is understudied for lobular inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), which is less common, more chemotherapy-resistant, and more mammographically occult than ductal IBC. We compared guideline-concordant surgery (modified radical mastectomy [MRM] without immediate reconstruction following chemotherapy) for lobular versus ductal IBC. Methods: Female individuals with cT4dM0 lobular and ductal IBC were identified in the National Cancer Database (NCDB) from 2010–2019. Modified radical mastectomy receipt was identified via codes for “modified radical mastectomy” or “mastectomy” and “≥10 lymph nodes removed” (proxy for axillary lymph node dissection). Descriptive statistics, chi-square tests, and t-tests were used. Results: A total of 1456 lobular and 10,445 ductal IBC patients were identified; 599 (41.1%) with lobular and 4859 (46.5%) with ductal IBC underwent MRMs (p = 0.001). Patients with lobular IBC included a higher proportion of individuals with cN0 disease (20.5% lobular vs. 13.7% ductal) and no lymph nodes examined at surgery (31.2% vs. 24.5%) but were less likely to be node-negative at surgery (12.7% vs. 17.1%, all p < 0.001). Among those who had lymph nodes removed at surgery, patients with lobular IBC also had fewer lymph nodes excised versus patients with ductal IBC (median [interquartile range], 7 (0–15) vs. 9 (0–17), p = 0.001). Conclusions: Lobular IBC patients were more likely to present with node-negative disease and less likely to be node-negative at surgery, despite having fewer, and more frequently no, lymph nodes examined versus ductal IBC patients. Future studies should investigate whether these treatment disparities are because of surgical approach, pathologic assessment, and/or data quality as captured in the NCDB. © The Author(s) 2024.
Keywords: adult; cancer chemotherapy; controlled study; aged; middle aged; cancer surgery; major clinical study; comparative study; outcome assessment; follow up; follow-up studies; lymph node dissection; lymph node excision; mastectomy; clinical assessment; practice guideline; pathology; breast neoplasms; breast reconstruction; axillary lymph node; breast tumor; practice guidelines as topic; surgery; intermethod comparison; neoadjuvant chemotherapy; guideline adherence; carcinoma, ductal, breast; axillary lymph node dissection; carcinoma, lobular; inflammatory breast cancer; radical mastectomy; mastectomy, modified radical; protocol compliance; lobular carcinoma; very elderly; humans; prognosis; human; female; article; simple mastectomy; breast ductal carcinoma; modified radical mastectomy; inflammatory breast neoplasms; ductal inflammatory breast cancer; lobular inflammatory breast cancer
Journal Title: Annals of Surgical Oncology
Volume: 31
Issue: 9
ISSN: 1068-9265
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2024-09-01
Start Page: 5929
End Page: 5936
Language: English
DOI: 10.1245/s10434-024-15540-1
PUBMED: 38886328
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11300632
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
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  1. Audree Blythe Tadros
    116 Tadros