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Prevention of Postoperative Complications by Negative Pressure Therapy After Complex Breast Cancer Surgery

Prevention of Postoperative Complications by Negative Pressure Therapy After Complex Breast Cancer Surgery: a Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Recruiting
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06265558
Acronym
TPN-SEIN
Enrollment
254
Registered
2024-02-20
Start date
2025-04-15
Completion date
2027-07-01
Last updated
2026-02-05

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Breast Cancer

Keywords

Pressure negative therapy, Breast surgery, Mastectomy

Brief summary

There is little scientific data concerning the use of negative pressure therapy after immediate breast reconstruction. That strategy of treatment-reconstruction has expanded increasingly since the last years. The current literature reports only 3 studies on the use of preventive negative pressure therapy in oncologic breast surgery. Moreover, all three are retrospective, case-control studies with serious limitations. The largest published series reports a reduction in the overall complication rate from 15.9% to 8.5%, and a significant reduction in several criteria: infection, scar dehiscence and necrosis. However, the study presents significant biases, with non-comparable populations in terms of comorbidities, surgical procedure performed, inclusion periods (and therefore experience in performing oncological surgery). There was also a high probability of under-assessment or postponement of post-operative complications, which is typical of published retrospective surgical studies. The published results therefore strongly encourage further investigation of negative pressure therapy in oncological breast surgery.

Detailed description

In 2022, excisional surgery is still one of the mainstays of breast cancer treatment. The excisional surgery is often combined with adjuvant treatments, which may include medical treatments such as chemotherapy, targeted therapies and immunotherapy, hormone therapy and radiotherapy. All these treatments have toxicities that impact on patients' quality of life. One of the main complications of surgery is scarring. The rate is around 2% for "simple" breast surgery (conservative breast surgery - total mastectomy). This rate can rise sharply in the case of "complex" breast surgery, such as high-level oncoplasty, or mastectomy with Immediate Breast Reconstruction (IBR). This rate of surgical wound complications (ischemia, necrosis, dehiscence, infection) reached 20% in our local series of Immediate Breast Reconstruction (IBR) by prosthesis. This rate may exceed 30% in some series, depending on the surgical technique and the population, in cases of smoking, diabetes, previous radiotherapy, obesity and large breast volume. The increasing prevalence of these risk factors in the population means that scarring disorders must be taken into account in daily cancer care. The impact of these scarring disorders is manifold: * Delayed initiation of adjuvant therapy with an impact on overall survival. * Cosmetic impact of scarring * Possible loss of prosthetic breast reconstruction * Patient dissatisfaction, with increased burden of care * Overall impact on patient quality of life * Economic impact linked to the length of care over time (consumption of dressing materials and personal time) Preventing the onset of wound-healing disorders is therefore vital in order to avoid these multiple consequences for the patient and the healthcare system. In breast surgery, the use of preventive NPT (Negative Pressure Therapy) has been little studied. The NPT has been used mainly in cosmetic surgery procedures such as breast reduction, with results in favor of NPT. The most comprehensive study is a multicenter randomized trial which included 200 patients scheduled for bilateral breast reduction. In this trial, the comparison was made between the 2 breasts, each patient being her own control. The calculation of the number of subjects was based on a reduction in the complication rate from 20% to 10% (i.e., a 50% reduction). The study was positive, showing a reduction in the dehiscence rate at day 21 from 26% to 16%. In this study, patients were under-selected, and around 40% had risk factors for complications. A second randomized study, with similar methodology and judgment criteria, included 32 patients undergoing bilateral breast reduction. The results of this study are significant, but unfortunately there weren't much detail in the publication. There is little scientific data concerning the use of negative pressure therapy after immediate breast reconstruction. There are very few data on the use of Negative pressure Therapy (NPT) after immediate Breast Reconstruction (IBR), a treatment-reconstruction strategy that has been expanding rapidly since recent years. The current literature reports only 3 studies on the use of preventive Negative pressure Therapy (NPT) in oncologic breast surgery. All three are retrospective, case-control studies with serious limitations. The largest published series involved 356 patients and 665 breasts. A reduction was reported in the overall complication rate from 15.9% to 8.5%, and a significant reduction in several criteria: infection, seroma, scar dehiscence and necrosis. However, the study presents significant biases, with non-comparable populations in terms of co-morbidities, surgical procedure performed, inclusion periods (and therefore experience in performing oncological surgery). There was also a high probability of under-assessment or postponement of post-operative complications, which is typical of published retrospective surgical studies. The published results therefore strongly encourage further investigation of Negative Pressure Therapy (NPT) in oncological breast surgery. Our hypothesis, then, is that preventive NPT in the immediate post-operative phase of complex breast surgery can prevent the onset of post-operative scarring disorders and shorten the time to complete healing. To date, there are no randomized prospective studies of NPT in complex oncologic breast surgery. Randomized studies already published in general surgery provide a good level of evidence for the efficacy of NPT in preventing local post-operative complications. The latest systematic review and meta-analysis found a reduction in the risk of surgical site infection, from 13% to 8.8%, all types of surgery included. The benefit on the risk of dehiscence in general surgery is less strong, but a 30% reduction was found in a meta-analysis of studies involving only a preventive NPT device, a device widely used throughout the world. In view of these results from randomized trials in general surgery and non-oncological breast surgery, and the results of retrospective studies in oncological breast surgery, a randomized trial must be carried out. This randomized controlled trial will be pragmatic, incorporating an intermediate analysis, given the endpoint evaluating the reduction in complications in a surgical context, to rapidly meet our objectives with a sufficient level of evidence to have an immediate impact on patients and modify practice.

Interventions

PROCEDURENegative pressure therapy (NPT)

Negative pressure therapy (NPT) involves placing the surface of a wound under a pressure lower than the ambient atmospheric pressure. To achieve this, a specially designed dressing is connected to a vacuum source and an exudate collection system.

PROCEDUREDressing

Fatty dressing or hydrocellular dressing

Sponsors

Institut du Cancer de Montpellier - Val d'Aurelle
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Female ≥ 18 years 2. Patient with unilateral invasive or in situ breast carcinoma 3. Patient with or without neoadjuvant treatment 4. Patient presenting an indication for complex breast surgery by mastectomy with immediate breast reconstruction by implant or oncoplasty by T-shaped mammoplasty. 5. Patient presenting at least one of the following risk factors for scarring disorders: * Obesity with Body Mass Index BMI ≥ 30 and/or Cup size ≥ E * Active smoking or smoking cessation for less than one month * Diabetes * History of homolateral breast radiotherapy * Long-term corticosteroid therapy 6. Patient to have signed informed consent prior to study entry 7. Willingness and ability to comply with scheduled visits, treatment plan, laboratory tests and other study procedures. 8. Patient affiliated with a health insurance plan.

Exclusion criteria

1. Legal incapacity or limited legal capacity. Medical or psychological conditions preventing the patient from completing the study or signing the consent form. 2. Pregnant or breast-feeding patient as determined in medical records as part of standard patients care and follow-up 3. Patient under guardianship or safeguard of justice 4. Patient participating in an interventional study with the objective of wound healing 5. Any concurrent or planned surgical procedure on the contralateral breast

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Rate of patients experiencing postoperative wound healing complicationFrom baseline to 30 days after surgerydefined as the presence of at least one of the following criteria: Deep postoperative infection of the prosthetic pocket (confirmed by a positive bacterial culture with a pathogen commonly associated with surgical site infections), wound dehiscence, or incomplete wound healing at postoperative day 30 (D30). The primary endpoint is a composite criterion (dehiscence, infection, or delayed wound healing at D30), with negative pressure wound therapy expected to reduce each complication individually. This composite endpoint capture overall postoperative wound healing complications by integrating multiple clinically relevant events into a single measure.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Rate of patients with a surgical site infectionFrom baseline to 90 days after the surgeryNumber of patients with surgical site infection divided by total number of patients operated on in the trial.
Surgical revision rateFrom baseline to 90 days after the surgeryNumber of patients with repeat surgery divided by the total number of patients operated on in the trial.
Incidence of patients with at least one hospital readmissionFrm baseline to 90 days after the surgeryNumber of patients with at least one hospital readmission divided by total number of patients operated on in the trial.
Surgical complication rate according to the National Cancer Institute - Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 5 classificationApproximately 10 days, from surgery to hospital dischargeThe NCI CTC classification is used for grading adverse events which occur as a result of trial procedures. It includes 5 grades from grade 1 (recourse to usual postoperative treatments) to Grade 5 (death).
Time to initiation of adjuvant therapyApproximately 3 months, from surgery to beginning of adjuvant therapyNumber of days between surgery and initiation of adjuvant therapy
Quality of life evaluated by questionnaire QLQ-C30 (Version 3)From baseline to 15 days then to 30 and 90 days after surgeryThe EORTC QLG Core Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30) is a 30-item instrument designed to measure quality of life in all cancer patients.Version 3, incorporates five functional scales on physical (PF), role (RF), cognitive (CF), emotional (EF) and social (SF) functioning, three symptom scales on fatigue (FA), pain (PA) and nausea and vomiting (NV), single items assessing dyspnoea (DY), insomnia (SL), loss of appetite (AP), constipation (CO) and diarrhoea (DI), one item assessing perceived financial impact (FI) and a global health status/QoL scale (Global QoL). Each item is scored in one of four categories 1) 'Not at all', 2) 'A little', 3) 'Quite a bit' 4) 'Very much', with the exception of 'Global QoL'which ranges from 1) 'Very poor' to 7) 'Excellent'. Scoring of the items in the PF scale in the latest revision of EORTC QLQ-C30, Version 3 is extended to the four-point scale instead of the previous 'Yes/No' dichotomy
Quality of life evaluated by questionnaire QLQ-BReast cancer (BR23)From baseline to 15 days then to 30 and 90 days after surgeryThe Breast Cancer module is a supplementary questionnaire module to be employed in conjunction with the QLQ-C30. The QLQ-BR23 incorporates five multi-item scales to assess body image, sexual functioning, systemic therapy side effects, breast symptoms, and arm symptoms. All of the scales and single-item measures range in score from 0 to 100. A high score for the functional scales represents a high/healthy level of functioning, whilst a high score for the symptom scales represents a high level of symptomatology or problems.
Patient satisfaction with cosmetic result evaluated using the BR23 questionnaireFrom baseline to 15 days then to 30 and 90 days after surgeryThe QLQ-BR23 incorporates five multi-item scales to assess body image, sexual functioning, systemic therapy side effects, breast symptoms, and arm symptoms.
Medical cost of post-surgery careFrom baseline to 90 days after surgeryA comparison will be conducted between the two study arms. The cost of post-operative care will be calculated based on data including the number and type of dressings, consumables, nursing time, reasons for hospital consultations and hospitalisations, and mode of transport in relation to the distance between the patient's home and the hospital
Time to complete wound healingFrom surgery to 30 days post-surgeryIt will be evaluated clinically by surgeon

Countries

France

Contacts

CONTACTMathias NERON, MD
mathias.neron@icm.unicancer.fr467614813
STUDY_CHAIRMathias NERON, MD

Institut régional du Cancer de Montpellier (ICM)

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 6, 2026