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Articles

Assessment of local tissue water in breasts following breast reconstruction with an expander prosthesis or DIEP flap

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon, , , &
Pages 217-223 | Received 26 Feb 2021, Accepted 11 Jul 2021, Published online: 03 Aug 2021
 

Abstract

The role of breast oedema in breast reconstruction is unknown. Therefore, our aim was to investigate local tissue water (LTW) and breast oedema-related symptoms in breasts reconstructed with either an expander prosthesis (EP) or with a deep inferior epigastric perforator (DIEP) flap at a minimum of one year postoperatively. Sixty-eight patients randomised to breast reconstruction with an EP or DIEP flap completed follow-up. Objective evaluation was performed at a mean of 25 (standard deviation, SD 9.5) months following breast reconstruction, and included measurements of breast volume and LTW with the MoistureMeterD® instrument. The patients completed the BREAST-Q questionnaire pre- and postoperatively. No significant differences in LTW were found when comparing EP and DIEP flap reconstructed breasts. The reconstructed breasts had an increase in LTW compared with the non-operated contralateral breasts. The BREAST-Q responses related to breast oedema symptoms were overall low and the median responses ranged from 1 to 2. A score of 1 indicated that symptoms were experienced ‘None of the time’. Our findings indicate that mastectomy followed by breast reconstruction inflicts damage on the lymphatic system, shown as an increase in LTW. However, no breast oedema-related symptoms were reported in the BREAST-Q questionnaire, and therefore, we consider our objective results to be below a potential threshold for symptomatic breast oedema. A threshold for clinical indication of breast oedema remains to be defined.

Acknowledgement

The authors express our sincere gratitude to the nurses Malin Levin and Lise-Lotte Mulder at the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Skåne University Hospital, Malmö, for their contributions to this study.

Disclosure statement

This study did not receive any financial support. The authors declare no conflicts of interest relevant for this article.