Introduction
The debate over the appropriateness of breast-conserving therapy (BCT) as a management strategy for stage I and II breast cancer has been resolved by prospective randomized trials which have demonstrated survival rates equal to those seen with mastectomy [1–7]. However, the definition of a clear margin used in these trials varied from no tumor cells in direct contact with the inked specimen edge [6–8], to several centimeters of normal breast tissue [2,3], leading to ongoing debate over what constitutes an adequate margin of excision. As a result, practice patterns in the United States and Europe are widely varied (Fig. 1) [9].
While there is agreement that positive margins, defined as tumor touching an inked surface, are associated with an increased risk of local recurrence, the significance of close margins, usually defined as less than 1 or 2 mm, is less clear. Smitt et al. reported 10-year actuarial rates of local failure of 3% for patients with negative margins compared with 16% for those with close margins [10]. In contrast, 10-year actuarial rates of local recurrence were 2% for patients with both close and negative margins in a study by Obedian and Haffty [11]. Further complicating the debate is the fact that multiple factors other than margin width influence the risk of local recurrence, making it unlikely that a margin width considered optimal for all patients can be defined. Local recurrence data from both prospective and retrospective studies is summarized in Table 1. From a practical point of view, the appropriate definition of a negative margin is one in which the residual breast tumor burden has been lowered enough by excision that it is likely to be controlled by adjuvant radiotherapy. This does not mean, however, that there are no additional tumor foci present within the breast. This article will review factors that we consider when assessing the adequacy of a surgical excision.
Factors to consider in assessing adequacy of excision
Margin orientation
A close margin is of concern because it may be indicative of a significant residual tumor burden in the remaining breast tissue [12]. The anterior and posterior margins of the breast are anatomically limited by the skin and pectoralis fascia, respectively. Tumor that is close to these margins does not have the same implication for residual disease as tumor approaching a margin where residual breast parenchyma remains. In addition, these margins are often artificially distorted by compression devices used for specimen radiography. In one study of 220 cases, specimen handling and inking was completely controlled by the surgeon and compression was only permitted in an anterior-posterior direction. A close or positive margin in this compressed direction was never found to correlate with residual disease upon re-excision, while a single close non-compressed margin and multiple close non-compressed margins demonstrated residual disease in 35.7% and 47.3% of cases, respectively [13].
Extent of tumor and margin width
Residual tumor is present in approximately 50% of patients who undergo re-excision for close or positive margins [14]. Neuschatz et al. evaluated residual disease as a function of initial margin width and found that while 1–2 mm margins were associated with a 31% risk of residual tumor at re-excision, margins greater than 2 mm eliminated that risk completely, although there were only 10 patients with an initial margin of greater than 2 mm [12]. Data from the same group on the relationship between margin width and local recurrence rates confirmed the significance of this observation. At 12 years of follow-up, local recurrence rates for women 45 years of age and younger and women older than 45 with positive margins were 25% and 14%, respectively. Excision to a negative margin width of 2–5 mm reduced local failure rates to 7% and 5%, respectively [15]. Extent of margin positivity is a predictor of both local recurrence and residual disease at re-excision. Darvishian et al. identified residual tumor in 9 of 10 patients having 1 cm or more of tumor at the margin surface. In contrast, only 2 of 14 patients with margin involvement of less than 5 mm had residual tumor identified [16]. In the Joint Center for Radiotherapy at Harvard experience, extent of margin positivity correlated with rates of local failure [17]. Local recurrence was observed in 27% of women with extensively positive margins, 14% of those with focally positive margins, and 7% of women with close margins. Overall, this information suggests that while 2 mm margins of resection provide good local control for the majority of patients, the benefit of re-excision in patients with microscopic foci of tumor within 2 mm of a margin surface is likely to be small.
Tumor histology
Histologic tumor type has also been correlated with the likelihood of residual disease when patients with positive or unknown margins are re-excised. This correlation is most evident for tumors with an extensive intraductal component (EIC). Holland et al. have demonstrated that 40% of tumors with an EIC have residual tumor at a distance of 1 cm from the primary tumor compared to fewer than 5% of ductal carcinomas which lack an EIC [18]. Others have shown that the presence of an EIC is predictive of both local recurrence and a higher likelihood of finding residual tumor on re-excision for close or positive margins [19,20]. Invasive lobular histology is also associated with a higher likelihood of residual tumor in the breast when margins are positive or unknown when compared with invasive ductal carcinoma [21]. This is consistent with what is known about the infiltrative growth pattern of invasive lobular carcinomas.
Patient age
Younger patient age is associated with a higher risk of local recurrence after BCT in multiple randomized trials [1,2,22]. While the reason for this is not clear, it appears that a greater negative margin width may mitigate this effect. In the study of Neuschatz et al., a negative margin width of 2 mm or less in women less than 45 years of age was associated with a 12-year local failure rate of 19% which was reduced to 7% if margin width was between 2 and 5 mm [12]. The prospective randomized trial by Bartelink et al. examining the benefit of a boost dose of radiotherapy to the primary tumor site also confirmed the benefit of more aggressive local therapy to the primary tumor site in women age 40 years or less [22]. Thus, young patient age should not be viewed as an indication for mastectomy since excision to clearly negative margins and the use of a boost to the primary tumor site reduces rates of local failure significantly.
Conclusion
Local recurrence rates after BCT have decreased significantly since the initial adoption of BCT [23]. The reason for this decrease is multifactorial, and includes improvements in mammography, more detailed pathologic evaluation of specimen margins, and the widespread use of adjuvant systemic therapy. In a series of women treated in National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP) trials in the 1990s who received adjuvant therapy, 10-year rates of local failure ranged from 3.5–6.5% [24]. Despite these improvements in local control, attention has most likely remained focused on margin size because this is felt to be within physician control, although many factors beside the actual margin width influence the risk of local recurrence. The low incidence of local recurrence reported by the NSABP, using a definition of tumor cells not touching ink as a negative margin, indicates that dogmatic adherence to a defined margin width for all patients is inappropriate and is likely to result in unnecessary mastectomies. In evaluating the need for re-excision in patients with margin widths of less than 2 mm we consider patient age, tumor histology, which margin is approximated by tumor, and the extent of disease approaching the margin. These enable us to assess whether re-excision is likely to be beneficial when confined to the margin(s) approached by tumor. Re-excision limited to those margins involved by tumor has been shown to identify residual tumor with the same frequency as re-excision of the entire cavity [25], and results in the removal of far less breast tissue which helps to preserve cosmesis. In the future, genetic profiling may allow us to identify tumors with a locally aggressive phenotype that would benefit from wide local excision or even mastectomy. Without this information, decisions about the need for re-excision should continue to be made on a case by case basis.