Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jul 2024)

Young Women with Early-Stage Breast Cancer Treated with Upfront Surgery: Overview of Oncological Outcomes

  • Lorenzo Scardina,
  • Beatrice Carnassale,
  • Alba Di Leone,
  • Alejandro Martin Sanchez,
  • Ersilia Biondi,
  • Francesca Moschella,
  • Sabatino D’Archi,
  • Antonio Franco,
  • Flavia De Lauretis,
  • Enrico Di Guglielmo,
  • Eleonora Petrazzuolo,
  • Stefano Magno,
  • Riccardo Masetti,
  • Gianluca Franceschini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13133966
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 13
p. 3966

Abstract

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Background: Breast cancer in young women aged Methods: We conducted a retrospective study including 130 young women with early breast cancer from a total of 373 consecutive patients treated with upfront surgery between January 2016 and December 2021 at our institution. Local recurrence-free survival (LR-FS), distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS), disease-free survival (DFS), and overall survival (OS) were evaluated. Results: The median follow-up was 61.1 months (range, 25–95). A total of 92 (70.8%) patients underwent breast-conserving surgery, while 38 (29.2%) patients underwent conservative mastectomy with immediate implant breast reconstruction. In total, 8 of 130 patients (6.2%) developed a local recurrence in the treated breast, an7 (5.4%) patients presented distant metastasis. Overall, two (1.6%) patients died due to breast cancer recurrence. Conclusions: The results of our study interestingly support breast-conserving surgery in young patients with early-stage breast cancer. While appropriate breast-conserving surgery can achieve favorable oncological outcomes and can always be considered a valid alternative to conservative mastectomy in upfront surgery, a younger age at diagnosis should never be used alone to choose the type of surgery.

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