Mastectomy or conservation: the patient's choice.
نویسندگان
چکیده
STUDY OBJECTIVE To determine whether, if given the choice, patients with breast cancer would prefer mastectomy or conservation treatment, neither treatment having been shown to be preferable. DESIGN Non-randomised case series with 28 patients interviewed after two years and all followed up. SETTING Secondary care referral centre. PATIENTS 153 women, aged less than 65, with T1, T2, N1, and N0 tumours of the breast given the choice of treatment (that is, all eligible patients from December 1979). INTERVENTIONS Patients were asked, after information and counselling, which treatment they would prefer. The chosen treatment was given without further question. Mastectomy included node sampling and local radiotherapy if indicated. Conservation treatment comprised excision of the lump, external radiotherapy, and irridium wire implant to tumour bed. MAIN RESULTS Conservation treatment was chosen by 54 women and mastectomy by 99. Reasons for preferring mastectomy included desire for rapid treatment for domestic or employment reasons and fear of possibility of future mastectomy. Only two of the sample interviewed regretted their choice. During limited follow up no advantages to either form of treatment were seen in terms of recurrence or survival. CONCLUSIONS Patients with breast cancer are capable of choosing treatment and should play a part in deciding which treatment to have. They do not automatically choose to retain the breast.
منابع مشابه
Psychological outcomes of different treatment policies in women with early breast cancer outside a clinical trial.
OBJECTIVES To assess outside a clinical trial the psychological outcome of different treatment policies in women with early breast cancer who underwent either mastectomy or breast conservation surgery depending on the surgeon's opinion or the patient's choice. To determine whether the extent of psychiatric morbidity reported in women who underwent breast conservation surgery was associated with...
متن کاملEconomic evaluation of breast cancer treatment: considering the value of patient choice.
PURPOSE To use 5 years of primary data to compare the incremental cost-effectiveness of breast conservation and radiation versus mastectomy with the restriction of choice to a single therapy versus providing a choice of either therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS We evaluated a random retrospective cohort of 2,517 Medicare beneficiaries treated for newly diagnosed stage I or II breast cancer from 19...
متن کاملMultiple Papillomatosis of Breast and Patient's Choice of Treatment
Papillary lesions of breast represent a range of lesions. Intraductal papilloma and its association with nipple discharge are well known. However, multiple papillomatosis has quite distinct characteristics and decision making can be somewhat challenging. We report a case of multiple papillomatosis in association with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). Patient opted for ipsilateral mastectomy and ...
متن کاملDeterminants of breast conservation rates: reasons for mastectomy at a comprehensive cancer center.
Bias in referral patterns and variations in multi-disciplinary management may impact breast conservation therapy (BCT) rates between hospitals. Retrospective studies of BCT rates are limited by their inability to differentiate indicated mastectomies versus those chosen by the patient. Our prospective breast cancer data base was queried for patients with invasive breast cancer who underwent surg...
متن کاملThe survival impact of the choice of surgical procedure after ipsilateral breast cancer recurrence.
BACKGROUND Many women with breast cancer recurrence previously treated with breast-conservation therapy desire repeat lumpectomies. We hypothesized that women undergoing mastectomy for breast cancer recurrence would show superior survival. METHODS Patients who previously received breast-conservation therapy diagnosed with an ipsilateral breast cancer recurrence between 1988 and 2004 were iden...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- BMJ
دوره 297 6661 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1988