Daily Mail

Hi-tech patch to check if breast op is healing

- By LUCY ELKINS

Atiny patch may improve the chances of a successful breast reconstruc­tion following cancer surgery.

it is also hoped it could eventually be used to monitor patients having other types of surgery — or even those who aren’t undergoing surgery, but need their breathing checked, for instance.

the device, roughly the size of a mobile phone SiM card, looks like a plaster and is applied to the skin on the area of the reconstruc­tion. it shines infrared light into the tissues — haemoglobi­n, the protein in blood that carries oxygen, then absorbs the light.

the more of the light that’s absorbed, the better, as it indicates a healthy flow of oxygenated blood to the tissues.

Results are sent wirelessly to a tablet or computer and can tell a surgeon if the new breast is healing well or if the tissue is in danger of dying through lack of blood.

techniques for breast reconstruc­tion vary, but typically involve taking tissue, skin and connecting blood vessels from elsewhere in the body and stitching them into position to form the new breast.

But there is a risk that, immediatel­y after surgery, clots form — for example, at the point where existing and new blood vessels meet. this can obstruct blood flow and the new breast may start to die.

More than 55,000 cases of breast cancer are diagnosed in the uK each year. up to 43 per cent of the women have a mastectomy and a third then have a reconstruc­tion.

CANCER Research uK says in one in ten cases using the patient’s own tissue, problems develop within 48 hours. as many as five out of every 100 such procedures fail (i.e. die) and the tissue has to be removed.

the patient must fully recover from the surgery, which takes up to 12 months, before another reconstruc­tion can be attempted.

Currently, the only way to tell if there is a problem with the blood supply is by touching and visually examining the breast to check for purple, congested or hard, or cold skin — alternativ­ely, a handheld Doppler device can be used to

detect the sound of blood pulsing through the vessels. yet problems can still be missed. this means the time for action to tackle them (for example, to flush through clot-busting drugs or reconnect blood vessels) can soon pass and the new breast may die.

‘We know some patients who are left flat-chested have inferior quality of life, feelings of femininity and confidence,’ says Daniel Leff, a breast cancer surgeon at imperial College Healthcare nHS trust who has been involved in preliminar­y studies of the patch. ‘Repeat or revision surgeries are costly for the health service, too.’

Mr Leff says the new patch may also cut down on the number of women unnecessar­ily taken back to surgery, when a complicati­on is wrongly suspected.

Researcher­s at imperial College London who have developed the Hamlyn bio-patch recently ran preliminar­y tests on 14 patients who’d had breast reconstruc­tion surgery following a mastectomy. they wore the patch for 48 hours after their operation — and early results showed it worked.

if larger trials are successful, the patch could be widely used for breast cancer patients within as little as two years. it could also be modified to measure vital signs, such as respiratio­n rates in nonsurgica­l patients — for example, those with chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease.

tena Walters, a consultant breast surgeon at the Harley Street Clinic in London, says: ‘[the patch] could have some value after reconstruc­tion, but it really needs to be tested against the establishe­d methods.

‘there’s a chance medical staff will rely on what the patch says, rather than the current approach, and that would be a concern.’

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