BACKGROUND The achievement of tumour-free margins on excision of nonpalpable breast lesions that have aroused only an intermediate or low level of suspicion before surgery and do turn out to be malignant is a challenge for the surgeon. The purpose of this study was to determine factors that influence the probability of obtaining tumour-free margins after needle-localised excision of a nonpalpable breast carcinoma. METHOD During a 10-year period all needle-localised breast biopsies (NLBB) carried out in the Department of Surgery were retrospectively analysed. Possible influential factors considered included: age of the patient, year of NLBB, appearance of the lesion on imaging, preoperative diagnostic index, method of localisation, surgeon's level of experience, specimen size and radiology of the specimen, and all these were analysed in a multivariate logistic regression analysis. RESULTS In all, 400 needle-localised breast biopsies had been performed. Excision with tumour-free margins was more often achieved, and the final intervention less often took the form of a mastectomy, when the lesion was classified preoperatively as malignant (P = 0.02). CONCLUSION The outcome of treatment of a needle-localised breast cancer excision is better when the breast lesion is known to be malignant before surgery.
A needle-localised open-breast biopsy for nonpalpable breast lesions should not be performed for diagnosis.
A. Bosch,G. Beets,A. Kessels,J. V. van Engelshoven,M. V. von Meyenfeldt
Published 2004 in Breast
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2004
- Venue
Breast
- Publication date
2004-12-01
- Fields of study
Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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