Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients Undergoing Vertical Scar versus Inverted T–Shaped Reduction Mammaplasty



Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients Undergoing Vertical Scar versus Inverted T–Shaped Reduction Mammaplasty


Achilleas Thoma M.D., M.Sc.

Teegan A. Ignacy B.Sc.

Eric K. Duku Ph.D.

Robert S. Patterson M.D.

Arianna Dal Cin M.D.

Carolyn M. Levis M.D., M.Sc.

Charles H. Goldsmith Ph.D.



Hamilton, Ontario; and Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada

From the Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, the Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, the Surgical Outcomes Research Center, and the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, McMaster University; and the Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University.

Received for publication September 14, 2012; accepted January 17, 2013.

This trial is registered under the name “Vertical Scar Versus Inferior Pedicle Reduction Mammoplasty,” Clinical Trials.gov identification number NCT00149344 (http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT00149344).

Presented at the 16th World Congress of the International Confederation for Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, May 21 through 27, 2011; the 91st Annual Meeting of the American Association of Plastic Surgeons, in San Francisco, California, April 14 through 17, 2012; and the 66th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Society of Plastic Surgeons, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, June 5 through 9, 2012.

Copyright © 2013 by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons

DOI: 10.1097/PRS.0b013e3182910cb0




There is cumulative evidence from several observational studies that breast hypertrophy is associated with clinically important morbidity and reduced health-related quality of life and that breast reduction has a beneficial effect.19 A randomized controlled trial comparing reduction mammaplasty to no surgery in patients with breast hypertrophy using quality-of-life scales confirmed the clinical benefit of surgery.10 The improvement in quality of life after breast reduction using the inverted T–shaped reduction technique was recently quantified to be 5.32 Quality Adjusted Life Years, which is equivalent to each patient gaining on average an additional 5.32 years of life in perfect health.11

On reviewing the breast reduction literature, there are two main techniques, with their characteristic scars, used in North America currently. The inverted T–shaped reduction technique was popularized by many authors in the 1970s.1215 Vertical scar reduction was promoted over the years by others.1620

In 2002, a survey of board-certified plastic surgeons demonstrated that inverted T–shaped reduction remained by far the most commonly used technique for breast reduction in the United States, preferred by 75.5 percent of survey respondents.21 A more recent survey among Canadian plastic surgeons showed that the inverted T–shaped reduction was preferred by 66 percent of surgeons.22 The pendulum may be shifting toward the vertical scar reduction technique because of the smaller scars and management of the learning curve.19

There is ongoing controversy concerning the superiority of one technique over the other in terms of patient satisfaction, complications, scar acceptance, and health care resource use.2326 We found one randomized controlled trial that compared the vertical scar reduction and inverted T–shaped reduction techniques.23 The authors concluded that although complications rates were similar, there was a higher rate of dog-ears using the vertical scar reduction technique. Using a Likert-type satisfaction scale, the patients rated the procedures similarly in terms of overall satisfaction. Cruz-Korchin and Korchin23 found a statistically significant difference in terms of scar acceptance and the aesthetic results in favor of the vertical scar reduction technique. In appraising the Cruz-Korchin and Korchin23 randomized controlled trial, we found a number of methodologic weaknesses, including the use of even and odd chart numbers to allocate patients, no reporting of a sample size justification, no mention of the learning curve, and no use of validated health-related quality of life scales. We therefore remain uncertain about the superiority of vertical scar reduction over inverted T–shaped reduction mammaplasty in a number of outcomes, including health-related quality of life. In the past three decades, evidence-based medicine and clinical outcomes research movements have promoted measuring surgical outcomes from the patient’s perspective.2730

The evidence from observational studies and the single randomized controlled trial suggests that there are no scientific or ethical concerns about one technique being better than the other, thus satisfying equipoise, the main precondition for performing a randomized controlled trial.31,32 The purpose of this study was to evaluate the superiority of vertical scar reduction mammaplasty to the inverted T–shaped reduction mammaplasty in terms of patient health-related quality of life.


Patients and Methods

This is a parallel randomized controlled trial comparing vertical scar reduction and inverted T–shaped reduction mammaplasty in terms of patient health-related quality of life. This study was approved by St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton and Hamilton Health Sciences research ethics boards. The objectives of the trial were explained to the patients. All patients gave written consent to participate before study initiation.

All women older than 18 years with breast hypertrophy who were candidates for both procedures (women requiring <1000 g resected from each breast) and received approval from the Ontario Health Insurance Plan were asked to participate. If there was uncertainty as to whether the resection would exceed 1000 g, patients were asked to measure the volume of their breasts using the Archimedes displacement principle. If neither breast exceeded 1000 g, the patient was considered eligible for the study. The 1000-g threshold was used, as a number of authors have expressed caution about using the vertical scar reduction technique in very large breasts.20,23,3336 Despite this restriction of cases involving less than 1000 g/breast, recent surveys of American and Canadian plastic surgeons revealed that the majority (80 percent and 87 percent, respectively) of reductions required the removal of less than 1000 g.21,22 Full inclusion/exclusion criteria are listed in Table 1. Baseline demographic information was collected before surgery.


Participating Surgeons and the Learning Curve

Four experienced plastic surgeons recruited participants from their private practices. The operations were performed at two McMaster University–affiliated hospitals in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. All four surgeons
participated in standardizing the operative protocol. Before trial initiation, each surgeon watched a video describing the vertical scar reduction technique, which we considered the novel technique, and performed at least 10 vertical scar reduction procedures without complication before commencing patient recruitment.








Table 1. Patient Eligibility Criteria






Inclusion criteria
   Patients suffering from breast hypertrophy
   Patients older than 18 yr
   Coverage approval from the Ontario Health Insurance Plan
   Candidates for both procedures (<1000 g/breast)
   Willingness to complete the quality of life questionnaires and follow-up
   Willingness to provide informed consent
Exclusion criteria
   Unilateral breast hypertrophy
   Inability to complete questionnaires (e.g., language barrier)
   Any other concurrent procedures (e.g., liposuction, mastopexy)
   Any previous breast reduction surgery
   Any preoperative radiotherapy


Randomization

Patients were recruited at their preoperative appointment approximately 1 week before surgery. Patients were randomized 1 hour before the actual surgery using a remote site 24-hour telephone system that randomized patients using a computer-generated sequence. The surgeon marked the patient with markings according to the technique. A note was made on the case report form if there was deviation from technique execution. Patients were equally likely to be randomized to either group. Sequences were stratified by surgeon. Block sizes of 2 and 4 were used and group allocation balance was achieved at allocations of multiples of eight.


Blinding

Because of the distinct scar patterns of each technique, patients and investigators could not be blinded to the technique. A blinded statistician however analyzed the data, using data coded as treatment 1 and treatment 2.


Surgical Techniques


Vertical Scar Reduction

The vertical scar reduction technique used was similar to the technique described by Hall-Findlay.19 The nipple-areola complex was based on a superomedial pedicle.


Inverted T–Shaped Reduction

The inverted T–shaped reduction technique was based on the Robbins technique, with the nipple-areola complex based on an inferior deepithelialized breast pedicle.14 No liposuction was performed on the breast, as such cointervention would have confounded the study. This was a pragmatic study37 and, as such, the staff surgeon performed the breast reduction on one breast and the assistant senior plastic resident performed the breast reduction on the second breast under direct supervision. Different plastic surgery residents rotated through the services of each of the four participating surgeons over the 5-year period of the trial. The weight of the tissue excised from each breast was recorded and sent to the pathology laboratory for tissue examination.

Jan 30, 2021 | Posted by in General Surgery | Comments Off on Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients Undergoing Vertical Scar versus Inverted T–Shaped Reduction Mammaplasty

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