Analysis of breast reduction complications derived from the BRAVO study
- PMID: 15861063
- DOI: 10.1097/01.prs.0000160695.33457.db
Analysis of breast reduction complications derived from the BRAVO study
Erratum in
- Plast Reconstr Surg. 2005 Jul;116(1):361
Abstract
Background: Analysis of complication data derived from the Breast Reduction Assessment: Value and Outcomes (BRAVO) study, a 9-month prospective, multicenter trial, is presented.
Methods: Data derived from 179 patients were analyzed, including bivariate associations between complications and single predictor variables (Fisher's exact test or chi-square testing) or continuous variables (two-sample t test) and, finally, logistic regression.
Results: The overall complication rate was 43 percent (77 patients). Simple, bivariate analysis linked preoperative breast volume, shoulder strap grooving, and a vertical incision with an increased incidence of complications (p < 0.05, 0.02, and 0.02, respectively). Delayed wound healing, the most common complication, correlated directly with average preoperative breast volume (p < 0.045), average resection weight/breast (p < 0.027), and smoking (p < 0.029) and inversely with age (p < 0.011). Vertical incision techniques were associated with an increased complication frequency (p < 0.05) without a link to specific complications. Logistic regression analysis associated resection weight as the sole variable for increased risk of complications (p = 0.05) and with absolute number of complications [mean resection weight of 791 g for patients without complications versus 847, 882, and 1752 g for patients with one, two, and three complications, respectively (p = 0.0022)]. Each 10-fold increase in resection weight increased the risk of complication 4.8 times and increased the risk of delayed healing 11.6 times.
Conclusions: Complication data revealed several significant features: (1) resection weight correlated with increased risk and absolute number of complications; (2) delayed healing correlated directly with resection weight and inversely with increasing age, anesthesia times, and preoperative Short Form-36 bodily pain score; (3) a vertical incision may be associated with increased incidence of complications but requires further analysis; and most importantly, (4) the presence of complications had no negative effect on improvement in Short Form-36 and Multidimensional Body-Self Relations Questionnaire scores.
Comment in
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Smoking and breast reduction.Plast Reconstr Surg. 2006 Jun;117(7):2506-7. doi: 10.1097/01.prs.0000219996.34475.ca. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2006. PMID: 16772971 No abstract available.
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