» Articles » PMID: 35599994

Adjuvant Skin-sparing Electrochemotherapy in a Breast Cancer Patient with a Prosthetic Implant: 5-year Follow-up Outcomes

Overview
Journal J Surg Case Rep
Specialty General Surgery
Date 2022 May 23
PMID 35599994
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

A 55-year-old woman with previous skin-sparing mastectomy and prosthetic reconstruction for multifocal ductal carcinoma developed homolateral axillary recurrence. Following nodal dissection, partial periprosthetic capsulectomy and the overlying breast skin excision, the pathology report revealed a positive cutaneous margin. Since further breast skin excision or radiotherapy would have compromised the prosthetic implant, and the patient was adamant about avoiding any endangering intervention, the multidisciplinary recommendation included skin-directed electrochemotherapy (ECT) in the frame of a multimodal treatment strategy. The procedure lasted 20 minutes under mild general sedation and included a bolus of intravenous bleomycin followed by local application of electric pulses using a needle electrode. The postprocedural course was uneventful, except for mild dermatologic toxicity. At 5 years, the patient is disease-free with the implant . This report illustrates the proof-of-concept of adjuvant skin-sparing ECT to sterilize resection margins, preserve a breast implant and highlight procedural details to avert toxicity.

Citing Articles

Post-Irradiation Breast Angiosarcoma: All the Possible Treatments and Electrochemotherapy. Case Report and Literature Review.

Parisi S, Gambardella C, Iovino F, Ruggiero R, Lucido F, Nesta G J Clin Med. 2024; 13(2).

PMID: 38256700 PMC: 10816174. DOI: 10.3390/jcm13020567.


Pulsed Electric Fields in Oncology: A Snapshot of Current Clinical Practices and Research Directions from the 4th World Congress of Electroporation.

Campana L, Daud A, Lancellotti F, Arroyo J, Davalos R, Di Prata C Cancers (Basel). 2023; 15(13).

PMID: 37444450 PMC: 10340685. DOI: 10.3390/cancers15133340.

References
1.
Jarm T, Cemazar M, Miklavcic D, Sersa G . Antivascular effects of electrochemotherapy: implications in treatment of bleeding metastases. Expert Rev Anticancer Ther. 2010; 10(5):729-46. DOI: 10.1586/era.10.43. View

2.
Hampton T . Electric pulses help with chemotherapy, may open new paths for other agents. JAMA. 2011; 305(6):549-51. DOI: 10.1001/jama.2011.92. View

3.
Costeira B, da Silva F, Oom R, Costa C, Moniz J, Abecasis N . Locoregional recurrence in skin-sparing and nipple-sparing mastectomies. J Surg Oncol. 2021; 125(3):352-360. DOI: 10.1002/jso.26725. View

4.
Dimick J, Sedrakyan A, McCulloch P . The IDEAL Framework for Evaluating Surgical Innovation: How It Can Be Used to Improve the Quality of Evidence. JAMA Surg. 2019; 154(8):685-686. DOI: 10.1001/jamasurg.2019.0903. View

5.
Cemazar M, Parkins C, Holder A, Chaplin D, Tozer G, Sersa G . Electroporation of human microvascular endothelial cells: evidence for an anti-vascular mechanism of electrochemotherapy. Br J Cancer. 2001; 84(4):565-70. PMC: 2363761. DOI: 10.1054/bjoc.2000.1625. View