Clinical study of vacuum-assisted excision of deep breast nodules via the retromammary space
Yuan-Yu Ma, Hai-Na Xin, Bin Ren

TL;DR
This study compares two surgical techniques for removing deep breast nodules and finds that one method offers better outcomes in terms of time, bleeding, and complications.
Contribution
The study provides clinical evidence supporting the use of retromammary-space vacuum-assisted excision for deep breast nodules.
Findings
Retromammary-space VAE showed shorter operative time and less blood loss compared to non-retromammary VAE.
The technique had fewer complications and required fewer punctures.
The benefits were consistent regardless of nodule size.
Abstract
To compare the therapeutic efficacy of retromammary-space vacuum-assisted excision (VAE) and non-retromammary VAE for deep breast nodules ≤3 cm in maximum diameter, providing a clinical basis for selecting the optimal surgical approach. A retrospective analysis was conducted on the clinical data of 162 patients who underwent minimally invasive surgery for deep breast nodules at Weifang Maternal and Child Health Hospital between May 2022 and November 2024. Among them, 81 patients received retromammary-space VAE, while another 81 underwent non-retromammary VAE. Based on nodule size, the retromammary-space VAE group was further divided into two subgroups: the 0–2 cm group (n = 41, 0 < nodule ≤ 2 cm) and the 2–3 cm group (n = 40, 2 cm < nodule ≤ 3 cm). The two groups were compared in terms of operative time, intraoperative blood loss, number of punctures, and incidence of postoperative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBreast Implant and Reconstruction · Breast Lesions and Carcinomas · Breast Cancer Treatment Studies
