ALCL breast implant associated cancer. TREATMENT according to new CME article

Posted on October 1, 2019

Medicine is a science and is ever evolving.

ALCL was first brought to our attention in 2011, but at the time was ridiculously rare (only 24 cases ever reported in the world).  It didn’t really come to the forefront again for years.  Over time, we started to see it more and more, though still very rare.  In 2018 they were citing risk of ALCL as 1:30,000.  They now cite it as 1:3,200.  That is still an incredibly rare number, but it is something we need to be aware of.

So if you have a TEXTURED implant, particularly made by Allergan or Sientra (they have higher rates of ALCL according to one 10 year study), and you get spontaneous swelling of one side around 8-10 years out, YOU NEED TO GET EVALUATED.

Turns out, they are finding that early treatment is the key to making ALCL super treatable.

So if you have it, what do you do?

First, you need to know what stage you are.

Nearly all BIA-ALCL patients have low-stage disease, either stage 1E (83 to 96 %) or stage IIE (3.6 to 18.8%).

Surgery

Chemo

Radiation

Seems to be only considered for unresectable disease.

Follow up

Every 3-6 months until 2 years out.  This is usually done with PET or CT scans.  16 deaths have been reported in total worldwide.

Coverage by Allergan warranty or insurance companies may apply.  See Allergan’s warranty HERE.

 

For medical professionals/insurance coding:
ICD-10 diagnosis codes

CPT Codes: