Conference Coverage

VIDEO: How to pick surgical margins with mixed breast lesions


 

From ASBS 2017

– According to recent guidelines, no ink on tumor is the right surgical margin for early stage invasive breast cancer and 2 mm is the right lumpectomy margin for ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) treated with whole breast radiation. But, what do you do when invasive carcinoma is associated with DCIS?

It’s a common question for breast surgeons. Monica Morrow, MD, chief of breast surgery at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, explained how to handle the situation in a video interview at the annual meeting of the American Society of Breast Surgeons.

She was the senior author on the 2014 invasive breast cancer guidelines and the lead author on the 2016 DCIS guidelines, both of which were consensus statements on surgical margins from the Society of Surgical Oncology and other groups (Ann Surg Oncol. 2014 Mar;21[3]:704-16; Ann Surg Oncol. 2016 Nov;23[12]:3801-10).

Dr. Morrow explained the thinking behind the guidelines and how to apply them to mixed lesions and other clinical scenarios, as well as their limitations and what remains to be determined. A key point is that a margin less than 2 mm is not by itself an indication for mastectomy in DCIS.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

Recommended Reading

VIDEO: HER2+ patients may do fine with local therapies alone
MDedge Surgery
Safe to avoid sentinel node biopsy in some breast cancer patients
MDedge Surgery
BRCA2 mutations linked to greater risk for pancreatic cancer
MDedge Surgery
NET can benefit breast cancer patients with delayed surgery
MDedge Surgery
Risk of recurrence outweighs risk of contralateral breast cancer for DCIS patients
MDedge Surgery
Multimodal breast cancer treatment linked with greater risk of lymphedema
MDedge Surgery
Study underscores aggressive approach to inflammatory breast cancer
MDedge Surgery
Lumpectomy plus reconstruction outperforms mastectomy plus reconstruction
MDedge Surgery
Don’t rely on MRI findings after DCIS needle biopsy
MDedge Surgery
Resection reduces inflammatory breast cancer lesion recurrence
MDedge Surgery