Background
Re-excision is common in breast-conserving surgery (BCS), partly due to lack of consensus on margin definitions. A population-based
surgeon sample was used to determine current attitudes toward margin width and identify characteristics associated with margin
choice.
Methods
Breast cancer patients treated from 2005 to 2007 were identified from Los Angeles and Detroit Surveillance, Epidemiology,
and End Results (SEER) registries. Pathology reports were used to identify their surgeons, who were surveyed (n = 418). Response rate was 74.6% (n = 312). Mean surgeon age was 51.9 years, 17.8% were female, and mean number of years in practice was 18.5.
Results
Wide variation in margin selection was noted among surgeons, and did not differ for invasive cancer and ductal carcinoma in
situ (DCIS). In a scenario of T1 invasive cancer, 11% of surgeons endorsed margins of tumor not touching ink (TNTI), 42% of
1–2 mm, 28% of ≥5 mm, and 19% >1 cm as precluding need for re-excision before radiotherapy. On multivariate analysis, having
50% or more of practice devoted to breast cancer independently predicted smaller margin choice (p = 0.03). For a patient with a 1.4-cm grade 2 estrogen receptor (ER)-positive DCIS without radiotherapy (RT) planned, 3% of
surgeons chose TNTI, 12% 1–2 mm, 25% ≥5 mm, and 61% >1 cm as sufficient without re-excision. In the scenario of DCIS without
RT, breast specialization independently predicted larger margin choice (p = 0.03). Gender and years in practice were not predictive of margin choice.
Conclusions
Wide variation in BCS margin definition exists. Variation is similar for invasive cancer and DCIS with RT, with more specialized
surgeons choosing smaller margins. In DCIS without RT, more specialized surgeons favored larger margins. A standardized margin
definition may significantly affect re-excision rates.
Presented in part at the 62nd Annual Cancer Symposium of the Society of Surgical Oncology, Phoenix AZ, March 2009.