
Someday I'll blog about skin-sparing mastectomies. But today I feel compelled to zoom in on a particular sub-area of the skin envelope (or purse)--and the part I was truly the most worried about when I asked my surgeon that question. This part of the breast can often be spared, as well, but it's not talked about a lot, even though it isn't nearly the fringe procedure it used to be a few short years ago. And again, as with so many issues involving reconstruction, a big part of the problem has been so many surgeons lacking training in newer breast recon techniques. So they decide not to inform their patients about alternatives they, themselves, don't happen to know how to do.
Maybe a woman not being informed that her nipple(s) could be spared doesn't rate up there in seriousness with other issues--such as docs recommending breast recon procedures best relegated to the surgical dark ages. But still, nipples are super important. I know lots of women who have suffered additional surgeries and procedures in the nipple quest to replace those lost to breast cancer--and it turns out they're not that easy to reproduce. I don't know exactly why this small, circular bulls-eye of pigmented skin emanates such strong juju in the context of the rest of the breast, but it's not difficult to imagine why. I'd guess part of it is mammalian hard-wiring.
After my lumpectomy (that was later followed by a mastectomy), what I feared most about removing my bandages was that my nipple would be gone. No one told me whether that was part of the "lump" they removed in the lumpectomy. And I felt embarrassed to ask the question, "Excuse me, nurse, do you know if I still have a nipple on this breast?" I was so happy to later find it there, in the middle of my bruised and battered breast, that I cried.
In fairness, part of the reason sparing the nipple is not universal practice yet is because there have been no large, longitudinal studies--as there have been in comparing regular to skin-sparing mastectomies--to determine the risk of nipples harboring or being potential incubators for breast cancer cells. Because of this, some women, even if offered the alternative of nipple-sparing mastectomies, decline. I've heard many women who've undergone prophylactic mastectomy due to their BRCA status, for example--which makes their risk of getting breast cancer sky high--say that if they are already going to such lengths to avoid cancer, they sure aren't going to take any unnecessary chances just to save their nipples.

There is so much fascinating information about nipples that this warrants at least a nipple blog trilogy. So I'm going to close Part One with the list of factors surgeons now use to determine if a woman is a candidate for a nipple-sparing mastectomy. But I will be writing more about some new research--and there have been some relatively recent, exciting findings--so stay tuned!

2. Cancer tumors in the breast should be less than three to four centimeters, whether invasive or non-invasive.
3. No lymph node involvement.
4. Cancer should not be present in more than one quadrant of the breast.