Evaluation of the Contralateral Breast
- 1 July 1992
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 216 (1) , 17-21
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-199207000-00003
Abstract
Ninety-five women who underwent blind contralateral breast biopsy during surgical treatment of a known breast cancer primary were studied prospectively. All biopsies were performed between 1981 and 1989. Patients with palpable or mammographic abnormalities prompting the contralateral biopsy were excluded so that the study sample included only truly blind contralateral biopsies. Only two infiltrating carcinomas were found, resulting in a positive biopsy rate of 2.1% for invasive disease. Three additional biopsies showed only lobular carcinoma in situ, a finding that usually does not alter clinical management. One patient with a negative contralateral biopsy developed invasive carcinoma in that breast within 2 years of the biopsy. The authors were unable to identify any subgroup of patients at increased risk of a positive contralateral biopsy. These results suggest that blind biopsy of the contralateral breast performed at the time of the initial treatment of breast carcinoma is not an efficient method of cancer detection. Alternative management strategies are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bilateral breast carcinoma: 28 years' experienceWorld Journal of Surgery, 1990
- CONTRALATERAL BREAST-CARCINOMA - AN ASSESSMENT OF RISK AND PROGNOSIS IN STAGE-I (T1N0M0) AND STAGE-II (T1N1M0) PATIENTS WITH 20-YEAR FOLLOW-UP1989
- RAPID ALKALINISATION FOR FLAVONE ACETIC ACID ADMINISTRATION: A POTENTIALLY HAZARDOUS PROCEDUREThe Lancet, 1988
- The prevalence of carcinoma in situ in normal and cancer-associated breastsHuman Pathology, 1985
- Pathologic findings from the national surgical adjuvant breast project (protocol no. 4): XI. Bilateral breast cancerCancer, 1984
- Ten- to Fourteen-Year Effect of Screening on Breast Cancer Mortality2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1982
- Lobular carcinoma in situ of the breast Detailed analysis of 99 patients with average follow-up of 24 yearsThe American Journal of Surgical Pathology, 1978
- Bilateral Breast CancerSurgical Clinics of North America, 1978
- Bilateral breast cancer.Biopsy of the opposite breastCancer, 1977
- Experience with opposite breast biopsy in patients with operable breast cancerCancer, 1976