Quadrantectomy
Quadrantectomy | |
---|---|
Specialty | surgical oncology |
[edit on Wikidata] |
A quadrantectomy, also referred to as a segmental or partial mastectomy, is a breast-conserving surgery for breast cancer in which one quarter of breast tissue is removed along with muscles of the chest wall within a 2 to 3 centimeter radius of a tumor.[1][2] This procedure is an alternative to a radical or simple mastectomy, in which an entire breast is removed.[2]
In a study that followed patients who underwent this procedure, it was found that only 9% of people who had a quadrantectomy experienced a relapse of the cancer.[3]
See also
- Mastectomy
- Lumpectomy
References
- ^ "Quadrantectomy". Encyclopedia of Surgery. Retrieved 2012-06-01.
- ^ a b "What Does a Quadrantectomy Involve?". News-Medical.net. 2016-09-01. Retrieved 2023-04-05.
- ^ Veronesi, U.; Cascinelli, N.; Mariani, L. (2002-10-17). "More Long-Term Data for Breast-Conserving Surgery". New England Journal of Medicine. 347 (16): 1227–1232. doi:10.1056/nejmoa020989. PMID 12393819.
- v
- t
- e
Tests and procedures involving the breast
- Breast-conserving surgery
- Lumpectomy
- Segmental resection
- Wide local excision
- Quadrantectomy
- Mastectomy
- Radical mastectomy
- Breast augmentation
- Trans-umbilical breast augmentation
- Mammaplasty
- Breast implant
- Breast reduction
- Mastopexy
- Breast reconstruction
- Interventions on the Lactiferous ducts