Breast Reconstruction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Direct to Implant Extracellular Matrix Hammock Based pre-or Retropectoral Breast Reconstruction
The purpose of this study is to examine different outcomes of breast reconstruction in women
who are treated for breast cancer with skin sparing mastectomy and subsequently a primary
implant based reconstruction by one of two different techniques with either a pre- or
retropectoral placement of the implant.
The main objective of the study is to establish whether one of these techniques may result in
a superior outcome and thus should be recommended as first choice treatment rather than the
other.
Women diagnosed with breast cancer, large areas of ductal carcinoma in situ or a hereditary
high risk of breast cancer are offered a mastectomy either as a therapeutic or a risk
reducing intervention. Those, who are found eligible for an immediate breast reconstruction
using an implant are reconstructed by either a skin sparing mastectomy (SSM) or a nipple
sparing mastectomy (NSM) using an extracellular matrix. The current technique is to place the
implant in a retropectoral pocket in which the cranial part of the implant is covered by the
major pectoral muscle, whereas the caudal part of the implant is covered and supported by an
extracellular dermal matrix (ADM) as a hammock.
Recent focus on the functional outcome has, however, identified a new challenge - breast
animation deformity (BAD), breast distortion or "jumping breast". The consequence of the
condition is that women with aesthetic pleasant results, in rest, experience breast animation
deformity during contraction of the major pectoral muscle. Evaluation of forty breast
augmented women with a subpectoral positioning of the implant revealed that 77.5% had some
kind of distortion during movement of the arm. In these healthy individuals, however, the
condition is partly hidden by the glandular tissue and subcutaneous fatty tissue.
The condition is more severe in women with a reconstructed breast using a retropectorally
placed implant, where the glandular tissue has been removed, leaving only the subcutaneous
fatty tissue to cover the muscle and implant. The investigators know from experience and from
reviewing unpublished clinical pictures and videos of thirty patients, who had an immediate
breast reconstruction using the hammock technique, that the vast majority of patients have a
pronounced degree of BAD.
Patients, who have a prepectoral placement of their implant, tend to have a lesser degree of
BAD. The functional outcome of the prepectoral placement of the implant has previously not
been compared to the retropectoral placement of the implant in women reconstructed by an
implant and an ADM. A possible disadvantage of a prepectoral placement of the implant may be
less soft-tissue coverage supplied by the pectoral muscle leading to higher risk of
significant capsular formation. Less soft-tissue coverage may also result in a more visible
implant border and rippling. Furthermore, the implant will not benefit from the abundant
vascularity of the muscle and in theory perhaps not be as resistant to infections and implant
loss as the subpectoral positioned implants.
The primary aim of this study is to compare the degree of BAD following a prepectoral to a
retropectoral placement of the implant using the hammock for immediate breast reconstruction.
For this purpose we have designed two separate trials:
Retrospective Follow-up trial: The investigators plan to invite a total of forty patients to
compare breast animation deformity and shoulder and arm morbidity in a retrospective cohort
of patients. Twenty patients, who have had a conventional immediate breast reconstruction
with a retropectoral placement of the implant will be compared to twenty patients , who have
had an immediate breast reconstruction with a prepectoral placement of the implant.
Randomized clinical trial: Investigators plan to collect, examine and compare data on the two
surgical techniques in order to test superiority of the prepectoral implant based
reconstruction in accordance with our hypothesis that it leads to lesser degree of BAD and
better functional outcomes.
The trial is thus designed with two parallel study-arms as participants are allocated to
reconstruction by either retro- or prepectoral placement of the implant in the ratio 1:1.
As the clinically most important parameter seems to be breast animation deformity this will
serve as primary end-point. Functional changes in shoulder and arm function between the two
surgical techniques is also a very important perimeter to investigate and will be analysed as
secondary end-points.
In addition to the above data a number of other patient related outcomes will be collected as
part of this trial.
Designed as a multicentre trial, participant enrollment and data Collection will be performed
at academic Hospitals in Denmark and Norway.
A password protected Electronic database placed on a secure server will be established. This
database will only be accessible to the primary investigator of the research Group who will
be involved in the analysis of the data.
This study will provide a better knowledge of the expected outcome of immediate breast
reconstruction, when it is performed by one of these two surgical techniques. The
investigators expect that these results will help determine if the prepectoral implant
placement may represent a better and gentler method for reconstruction of the breast with
lower morbidity than the retropectoral implant placement. In all cases the results of this
trial will enable us to provide our patients with better and more objective information,
before they are subjected to immediate breast reconstruction.
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