Ductal Carcinoma In Situ (DCIS) and Microinvasive DCIS: Role of Surgery in Early Diagnosis of Breast Cancer.
Francesca MagnoniBeatrice BianchiGiovanni CorsoErica Anna AlloggioSusanna Di SilvestreGiuliarianna AbruzzeseVirgilio SacchiniViviana GalimbertiPaolo VeronesiPublished in: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Advances in treatments, screening, and awareness have led to continually decreasing breast cancer-related mortality rates in the past decades. This achievement is coupled with early breast cancer diagnosis. Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and microinvasive breast cancer have increasingly been diagnosed in the context of mammographic screening. Clinical management of DCIS is heterogenous, and the clinical significance of microinvasion in DCIS remains elusive, although microinvasive DCIS (DCIS-Mi) is distinct from "pure" DCIS. Upfront surgery has a fundamental role in the overall treatment of these breast diseases. The growing number of screen-detected DCIS diagnoses with clinicopathological features of low risk for local recurrence (LR) allows more conservative surgical options, followed by personalised adjuvant radiotherapy plans. Furthermore, studies are underway to evaluate the validity of surgery omission in selected low-risk categories. Nevertheless, the management, the priority of axillary surgical staging, and the prognosis of DCIS-Mi remain the subject of debate, demonstrating how the paucity of data still necessitates adequate studies to provide conclusive guidelines. The current scientific scenario for DCIS and DCIS-Mi surgical approach consists of highly controversial and diversified sources, which this narrative review will delineate and clarify.
Keyphrases
- minimally invasive
- early stage
- coronary artery bypass
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular events
- lymph node
- cardiovascular disease
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- early breast cancer
- radiation therapy
- coronary artery disease
- squamous cell carcinoma
- high throughput
- big data
- atrial fibrillation
- rectal cancer
- sentinel lymph node
- locally advanced
- artificial intelligence
- clinical practice