4.3 Article

Impact of Breast Cancer Surgery on the Self-esteem and Sexual Life of Female Patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL RESEARCH
Volume 37, Issue 1, Pages 182-188

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/147323000903700122

Keywords

BREAST CANCER; COSMETIC ASSESSMENT; BREAST CONSERVING SURGERY; BREAST RECONSTRUCTION; MASTECTOMY

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Patient satisfaction with cosmetic outcome and the psychological impact of breast cancer surgery were evaluated. A total of 207 patients with primary breast cancer, treated with either breast-conserving surgery (n = 83), modified radical mastectomy without reconstruction (n = 108), or mastectomy with delayed breast reconstruction (n = 16) rated their cosmetic outcome and satisfaction following surgery, and the impact of surgery on their self-esteem and sexual life, by questionnaire. Patients undergoing breast-conserving surgery were most satisfied with their surgery and body image, followed by those treated with mastectomy with delayed reconstruction. Although diagnosis of breast cancer had a negative impact on the psychology of all patients, those undergoing breast-conserving surgery or mastectomy with delayed reconstruction were more satisfied and reported a lower impact on their self-esteem and sexual life versus those who only had mastectomy. Diagnosis of breast cancer has a negative psychological impact on the patient, but the type of surgery has a significant role in post-operative self-esteem and sexual life.

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