The Breast : official journal of the European Society of Mastology
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This study explored factors associated with the likelihood of reconstruction after unilateral mastectomy and the wellbeing of women after reconstruction. Data were from a questionnaire completed on average 1.8 years after diagnosis by 1429 women in the BUPA Health and Wellbeing After Breast Cancer Study. Logistic regression was used to model factors associated with reconstruction. ⋯ Being younger (p<0.001), educated beyond school (p<0.04), living in the metropolitan area (p<0.001), having private health insurance (p=0.003), not having dependent children (p=0.004) and not having radiotherapy (p<0.001) explained just over 40% of the variation in reconstruction status. There was a modest difference between women who did and did not have a reconstruction in terms of wellbeing. Demographic factors strongly influence the likelihood of reconstruction after mastectomy.
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Triple negative breast cancers (negative estrogen receptor, progestagen receptor and no overexpression of HER2) seems to be more aggressive than other breast carcinoma subtypes. Therefore, it is necessary to analyze if a more aggressive surgical treatment should be offered to this subgroup of patients. ⋯ It was not possible to find statistically significant differences between conservative and non-conservative surgery for triple negative breast cancer. However, a trend was observed for higher recurrence rates after breast conservative surgery for this group of patients. Prospective clinical trials are needed to confirm this observation.
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Post-mastectomy pain syndrome is defined as a chronic pain that persists beyond the normal healing time of 3 months. It is considered a neuropathic condition that arises after surgery for breast cancer. ⋯ One hundred seventy-four women were examined. The mean age was 58 years. The incidence of pain syndrome was 52%. Younger women (<40 years) and those who were submitted to axillary lymph node dissection (with more than 15 lymph nodes excised) have shown a significantly increased risk of pain syndrome after surgery for breast cancer (relative risk (RR) =5.23 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.11-24.64) and (RR=2.01 95% CI: 1.08-3.75).