Fat Grafting, also known as fat
transfers or fat injections, is a plastic surgery procedure which removes fat
from unwanted areas of your body, it is then methodically processed, once it’s
ready, it is reinjected to the particular adipose fat tissue where more volume
is desired. Fat injections are commonly used as a rejuvenation agent for the
face, buttocks, hands, or breasts. There has also been in increase in the use
of fat injections in reconstructive breast surgery. The advantages being that
fat grafting will restore volume to the breast and can be performed with or
without the need of an implant.
Being that the procedure is fairly
new, there have been some concerns expressed about how the fat injections
affect the results and efficacy of mammograms.
We would like to share a few varying perspectives on the matter
Lately we have seen some plastic
surgery blogs expressing concern regarding how fat injections to the breast
affect mammograms. We feel that both sides of the story are not being told, so
we would like to address that here. The
heated debate hit the The Plastic
and Reconstructive Surgery Journal, a journal of peer reviewed
studies from the plastic surgery community, recently published several papers
that come to different conclusions about whether fat injections to the breast
can interfere with cancer screening.
Let’s explore these publications
to review the various findings.
The
Chinese Study
April 2011, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
“Clinical Analyses of Clustered
Microcalcifications after Autologous Fat Injection for Breast Augmentation”
The
recently released paper, published in the April 2011 issue, put fat injections
to the breast in a negative light. The study was conducted by Chinese plastic
surgeons at Meitan General Hospital and Peking Union Medical College Hospital
in Beijing, China. The Chinese study concluded that fat injections create
issues with mammograms used to detect cancer in the breast. Based on these
findings, the study recommended prohibiting all fat injections to the breast.
This study analyzed ‘digitized mammographic films’
from 48 patients who had received fat injections to the breast from July 1999
to December 2009.
The study
focused on calcifications which occur after fat grafting is performed.
When a fat
injection does not take well, the fat cells can die (fat necrosis), and take on
the appearance of a calcification. The Chinese study concluded that mammograms
cannot distinguish between calcifications formed from fat or calcifications
that may be cancerous. The study’s abstract conclusion states “clustered
microcalcifications found after autologous fat injection for breast
augmentation, cannot be distinguished from malignancy.”
Even
though all calcifications were biopsied to be non-malignant, the study also
reached a grandiose conclusion that fat injections to the breast “should be
prohibited.”
So–should fat injections to the
breast be outlawed? Or is there another side to the story? If so, what is it?
The heart of the matter is whether radiologists can distinguish if
calcifications seen on mammograms are due to dead fat cells, or from malignant
cancer cells. First of all, not all fat grafting produces calcifications.
If a fat graft takes well, there will be fewer dead fat cells, or fat necrosis,
thus resulting in fewer or no calcifications. However, a poorly performed fat
graft will likely have lots of dead fat cells, likely resulting in more
calcifications.
Let’s look at other recent
articles that were published on the topic of fat injections and mammograms, all
within the last month.
The
Discussion Article about the Chinese Study
April 2011, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Daniel DelVecchio, M.D.
The same
April 2011 Plastic Surgery Journal issue included a ‘Discussion’ article about
the Chinese study. If you had a hard copy of April’s journal, you would simply
turn from the last page of the Chinese publication to read the ‘Discussion’
section that immediately follows written by Plastic Surgeon, Dr. Daniel
DelVecchio. Dr. DelVecchio was an early adapter of fat grafting to the breast
and has been published frequently in the Plastic Surgery literature.
Dr.
DelVecchio brought up several excellent points as to why the Chinese
publication conclusion was without merit. One point addressed concerned the
issue of the resolution quality of the mammograms. What type of mammography did
the Chinese use? The Chinese publications stated that they used ‘digitized
mammographic films.’
According
to DelVecchio, this would imply that plain screen film mammograms were
initially imaged, and later digitized. Per DelVecchio: “the quality of
digitized screen film mammogram is only as good as the quality of the original
mammogram, and it is common industry knowledge that screen film mammograms are
inferior to direct digital mammograms.”
In other
words–did the Chinese study simply digitize mammogram films with inferior
resolution?
Dr.
DelVecchio pointed to the work of other fat grafting pioneers, such as Dr.
Emmanuel Delay, who have described the ability to distinguish between benign
and malignant findings on post fat grafting mammograms. DelVecchio cited the
radiologic literature which supported the general concept that calcifications and fat necrosis can be
distinguished from the malignant signs of irregularly shaped, high-opacity
microcalcifications when supplemental imaging modalities are considered.
Other
notable points made by Dr. DelVecchio included the need for standardization of
fat injection procedures in order to minimize fat necrosis, which result in
calcifications. Deviation from ideal fat grafting techniques result in poor fat
take because some of the fat dies. It is these dead fat cells that can result
in calcifications. As standards emerge for the best fat grafting techniques,
there will be less fat necrosis and calcifications to show up on mammograms as
a result of fat injections to the breast.
In
DelVecchio’s opinion, modern mammography techniques can distinguish between
malignancy and benign fat deposits found on mammograms.
The
French Study
March 2011, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
“Radiographic Findings after Breast
Augmentation by Autologous Fat Transfer”
Exactly
one month prior to the Chinese article publication, a group of French surgeons
published an article in the March 2011 issue of Plastic Surgery Journal. The
study compared mammograms pre and post operative mammograms on 20 patients who
underwent fat grafting to the breast. The study’s goal was to determine whether
the transfer of fat to the native breast hampers breast imaging.
Using
guidelines stabled by the American College of Radiology classification, the
study concluded that radiographic
follow up of breast treated with fat grafting is not problematic and should not
be a hindrance to the procedures. However, the study did recommend
that techniques used for fat injection patients should become standardized, so
that reproducibility could be insured.
Our
Summary:
As more and more radiographers
become more familiar with fat grafting and how it may skew results, we expect
this mammogram issue to diminish, as was seen when breast implants gained
popularity
Perhaps the more significant fact
to report yet is that of the thousands of fat graphs to the breast completed to
date, there has not been a single case of cancer missed by a mammogram that
could be attributed to a fat graft procedure.
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