Oncoplastic breast surgery is the fusion of oncological and surgical principles to gain successful breast tumour excision with good cosmesis. It is an widely accepted and popular method in the western world. However, the picture is different in India. The major issues here, like late detection and advanced tumours, poor socio-economic status overriding quality of life issue and shortage of dedicated oncoplastic surgeons result in a poor acceptance and practice of oncoplastic breast surgery. This article explores the use of various oncoplastic techniques in clinical practice and discusses future directions in this emerging field in an Indian perspective. In our institute (breast care unit, I.P.G.M.E&R,Kolkata), we performed a retrospective study over a period of five years (2005-2009). It included a sample size of 30 patients with diagnosed breast cancer or Phylloides Tumor (PT). The study focused on the indications, type of oncoplastic procedure used, cosmetic outcome (shape / volume replacement, ptosis correction & chest wall coverage), complications faced and response to subsequent therapy. The indications, for which oncoplastic techniques were applied, were DCIS (2), LCIS (1), IDC (19) and phylloides tumor (8). Of the 30 patients, RAT was used in 8, LDMF (of various types and volume) was used in 16, pedicled TRAM flap was used in 3 and reduction mastopexy in 3.The procedural indications of reconstruction were total glandular replacement by TRAM flap, mini-LDMF to fill volume loss after BCS or wide local excision, rotation advancement technique for reshaping / symmetry maintenance after BCS or wide local excision, LDMF for chest wall coverage after MRM and reduction mastopexy after wide local excision. From patient's point of view the outcome of surgery was highly satisfactory (score 3 or more) in 19 out of 30 patients (63.33%). LDMF was the most commonly used (16 out of 30) oncoplastic procedure with least complication rates (0 out of 16). 4 out of 30 patients had complications related to the procedure. Chest wall coverage after MRM still forms the main indication of oncoplastic surgery in this country.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.