Good long-term quality of life after DIEP Flap Breast Reconstruction
April 29, 2016
American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS)
For women who have undergone mastectomy for breast cancer, breast reconstruction using the abdominal "DIEP flap" provides good long-term quality of life similar to that of women without breast cancer, reports a study in the May issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery®, the official medical journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS).
The DIEP technique also provides better quality of life than no breast reconstruction or reconstruction using other methods, according to the study by Dr. Vincent Hunsinger of Georges Pompidou European Hospital, Paris, and colleagues. They write, "Our results indicate that DIEP breast reconstruction allows patients with breast cancer to maintain a good quality of life in the long-term."
Good quality of life scores 8 years after DIEP flap reconstruction
The researchers sent a standard questionnaire to women who had mastectomy for breast cancer treatment. In 111 women, mastectomy was followed by autologous reconstruction using the DIEP flap, a popular option using tissue from the abdomen to reconstruct the breast. DIEP refers to the "deep inferior epigastric perforator," the major blood vessel used in the reconstruction.
A comparison group of 205 patients underwent some other type of breast reconstruction, such as implant-based techniques (70 women) or no reconstruction at all (135 women). Quality of life scores were compared between groups at an average follow-up of 8.6 years. The researchers also compared quality of life in the DIEP group to those of about 3,300 women from the French general population.
For women who underwent DIEP flap reconstruction, quality of life scores were similar to those for women of similar age in the general population. Women in the DIEP group actually scored higher on some subscales. However, because of the relatively small number of patients, most of these differences were not significant.
Compared to other women who had mastectomy, quality of life scores were significantly better with DIEP flap reconstruction. Women in the DIEP group had higher scores in all areas of quality of life compared to those with no breast reconstruction, and on five out of eight subscales compared to those with other types of reconstruction.
Breast cancer and mastectomy have a major impact on physical and mental health and other aspects of quality of life. The DIEP flap has emerged as a popular "muscle-sparing" technique, reducing some of the complications of other autologous breast reconstruction approaches.
The new study suggests lasting improvements in quality of life for women undergoing DIEP flap reconstruction after mastectomy. With the DIEP flap, quality of life scores are comparable to those of women in the general population, and better than in women who have had mastectomy without reconstruction or with other approaches.
Within its limitations, the study adds to previous evidence that DIEP flap reconstruction produces lasting physical and mental health benefits after mastectomy. The researchers note that some of their patients were treated several years ago—before technical advances that further improved the outcomes of DIEP reconstruction.
"Our study shows that DIEP flap breast reconstruction restores long-term quality of life after breast cancer surgery," Dr. Hunsinger and colleagues conclude. They suggest that undergoing breast reconstruction may enhance women's ability to fight against the burden of breast cancer, particularly in younger age groups.