Experimental and Clinical Investigation of the Implant Surface Roughness Reduction Effect on Early-stage Fibrosis
Capsular Contracture Associated With Implant, Foreign-Body Reaction, Wounds and Injuries
About this trial
This is an interventional other trial for Capsular Contracture Associated With Implant focused on measuring prophylactic NSME (nipple sparing mastectomy), implant-based breast reconstruction, medical grade silicone, SMI (silicone mammary implants), Foreign body response to SMI, SMI encapsulation, immunoreactivity of SMI surface topography, capsular fibrosis, immunomodulation by SMI-surface roughness
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Age > 18 years Female sex High risk family history for mammary and/or ovarian cancer Planned prophylactic mastectomy with simultaneous breast reconstruction Signed informed consent form Exclusion Criteria: Confirmed sever Coagulation disorder, representing a potential contraindication for the elective surgery Confirmed Rheumatic disease accompanied by obligatory intake of immunomodulating therapeutic agents Confirmed severe renal functional disorder: Renal insufficiency status IV or V Active hematological or oncological disease HIV-Infection Hepatitis-Infection Pregnancy or breast feeding Intake of anti-inflammatory drugs Carrier of silicone implants (e.g. gastric banding, mammary implants) Subject is currently participating or intends to participate in another clinical trial that may interfere with the protocol of this study Patients who have implanted devices that could be affected by a magnetic field (e.g., pacemakers, drug infusion devices, artificial sensing devices) * patients with removable devices such as removable diabetes pumps, sensors and transmitter might still part take, Patients with alteration in hematologic and serum protein reference values post-chemotherapy. When there is a residual malignancy in the intended expansion site. Existing tissue at the intended expansion site is not adequate according to the surgeon's criteria, because of previous radiation therapy, ulcerations, vascular compromise, history of compromised wound healing, or scar deformity. Radiation therapy before or after the expander placement can be associated with a higher rate of complications during the expansion and final implantation phases of the reconstructive process. Abscess or infection in the body in general. Participants with autoimmune diseases (e.g., lupus, scleroderma) or whose immune system is compromised (e.g., currently receiving immunosuppressive therapy such as steroids). Unsuitable tissue due to radiation damage on the chest wall, tight thoracic skin grafts or radical resection of the pectoralis major muscle.
Sites / Locations
- Medical University of Innsbruck, Department for Plastic, Aethetic and Reconstructive Surgery
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
the conventional expander Mentor CPX4 (MENTOR)
the expander SmoothSilk(Motiva) with reduced surface roughness
intraindividual comparison of two differentially rough tissue expanders Arm description: women undergoing prophylactic bilateral NSME and simultaneous tissue-expander based reconstruction with conventionally textured expander with surface roughness 60µM Ra
intraindividual comparison of two differentially rough tissue expanders Arm description: women undergoing prophylactic bilateral NSME and simultaneous tissue-expander based reconstruction with reduced textured expander with surface roughness 4µM Ra