Breast cancer patients in Aylesbury Vale among first to benefit from groundbreaking new surgery

The new method being is implemented at Wycombe Hospital
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Breast cancer patients in Bucks will be among the first to benefit from a groundbreaking new method for surgery

Bucks Healthcare NHS Trust’s Breast Unit at Wycombe Hospital has become one of the first in the UK to use the MagTotal approach to improve the surgical process for treating some breast cancers.

The approach involves a small single-use metal device (seed) called Magseed, designed to accurately mark the site of a breast cancer lesion for surgical removal, and a lymphatic tracer called Magtrace, used as an alternative to radioactive tracers for breast cancer staging, in one single surgery.

Consultant Surgeons Dr Fiona Tsang-Wright and Nicholas Holford with a bottle containing the lymphatic tracer MagtraceConsultant Surgeons Dr Fiona Tsang-Wright and Nicholas Holford with a bottle containing the lymphatic tracer Magtrace
Consultant Surgeons Dr Fiona Tsang-Wright and Nicholas Holford with a bottle containing the lymphatic tracer Magtrace

In this procedure, the seed is placed with a needle into the patient’s tumour under local anaesthetic and ultrasound or stereotactic X-ray guidance.

This helps guide surgeons during a breast lumpectomy to identify breast cancers that cannot be felt by touch.

The pioneering MagTotal approach delivers precision accuracy, reduces operating time and improves surgical logistics for both the patient and the hospital team.

Consultant breast surgeon Dr Fiona Tsang-Wright said: “I am so proud that our breast unit is one of the first in UK to use the MagTotal approach for the localisation of breast cancer and lymph nodes.

The pioneering new surgical method is being used in the Breast Unit at Wycombe HospitalThe pioneering new surgical method is being used in the Breast Unit at Wycombe Hospital
The pioneering new surgical method is being used in the Breast Unit at Wycombe Hospital

"This is brilliant for our Buckinghamshire patients because it makes the day of surgery so much less stressful and uses magnetic technology for the accurate and precise removal of their cancer.

"It also means that the team can perform two essential surgeries with just one machine and forego the need to use radioactive solutions. It’s a win-win for patient and clinician.”

As well as the seed, Magtrace is also injected ahead of surgery (up to 30 days before) in the MagTotal approach. Once injected, it will move to the lymph nodes most likely to contain an invasive cancer, staying there until it’s time to remove those nodes.

At the time of surgery, the location of the seed is first detected with a probe, followed by marking the lymph nodes with Magtrace.

A magnetic sensing machine called the Sentimag provides the guidance, using different pitches of sound and an on-screen reading to let surgeons know how close they are to the target tissue.

The tumour containing the seed will then be removed, along with the marked lymph nodes.

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