Ductal Carcinoma in Situ Diagnosed with Stereotactic Core Needle Biopsy: Can Invasion Be Predicted?
- 1 November 2000
- journal article
- Published by Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) in Radiology
- Vol. 217 (2) , 466-470
- https://doi.org/10.1148/radiology.217.2.r00nv08466
Abstract
To determine whether mammographic or histologic features can be used to predict which cases diagnosed as ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) without invasion by means of stereotactic core needle biopsy (SCNB) will have invasive disease at surgery. From July 1992 to March 1999, DCIS without invasion was diagnosed by means of SCNB in 59 patients. Seventeen (29%) were found to have invasive disease after surgery. The underestimation rate for SCNB was compared with that obtained by means of open surgical biopsy. Mammographic and histologic features of cases with and those without invasion were compared. All patients had calcifications on mammograms. There was no significant difference (P: =.26) between the underestimation rate for SCNB with the 11-gauge vacuum-assisted device and that for open surgical biopsy. No statistically significant differences between cases with and those without invasion were seen in patient age, mean number of core specimens, level of suspicion, size of lesion, distribution and morphology of the calcifications, presence of an associated mass or density, subtype of DCIS, nuclear grade, or presence of necrosis or desmoplasia. Mammographic and histologic features cannot be used reliably to predict cases that are underestimated with SCNB. However, SCNB with the 11-gauge vacuum-assisted device was as reliable as open surgical biopsy for diagnosing DCIS without invasion.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stereotaxic core biopsy of breast carcinoma: accuracy at predicting invasion.Radiology, 1995
- Percutaneous large-core breast biopsy: a multi-institutional study.Radiology, 1994
- Stereotaxic large-core needle biopsy of 450 nonpalpable breast lesions with surgical correlation in lesions with cancer or atypical hyperplasia.Radiology, 1994
- Breast biopsy: a comparative study of stereotaxically guided core and excisional techniques.American Journal of Roentgenology, 1994
- Nonpalpable breast lesions: correlation of stereotaxic large-core needle biopsy and surgical biopsy results.Radiology, 1993
- The Nottingham prognostic index in primary breast cancerBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 1992
- Nonpalpable breast lesions: stereotactic automated large-core biopsies.Radiology, 1991
- Extent, distribution, and mammographic/ histological correlations of breast ductal carcinoma in situThe Lancet, 1990
- Heterogeneity of intraductai carcinoma of the breastCancer, 1989
- Duct carcinoma in situ . Relationship of extent of noninvasive disease to the frequency of occult invasion, multicentricity, lymph node metastases, and short‐term treatment failuresCancer, 1982