Breast cancer (BC) is the most common malignant tumour in women (Sung et al., 2021). According to the WHO in 2018, 11.6% of the number of new cancers worldwide were breast cancer (Bray et al., 2018).Breast cancer accounts for 13% of all cancer patients aged 15-49 (Mattiuzzi & Lippi, 2019). Early screening, diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer standardization reduce the incidence rate of breast cancer-related mortality and raise the 5-year survival rate. The overall 5-year survival rates of stage I, II and III patients were 98%, 92% and 75% respectively (DeSantis et al., 2019). Therefore, the number of breast cancer survivors will continue to increase.Radical surgery (Bogach et al., 2022) supplemented by chemotherapy, radiotherapy, endocrine therapy and other therapies (Bhat et al., 2022;Dong et al., 2022;Wang et al., 2020) is the main treatment for BC. Radical surgery for BC primarily includes BC standard radical surgery (Halsted surgery), BC modified radical surgery, simple mastectomy, breast-conserving surgery, axillary lymph node dissection