Farshid Gelareh, Gill P Grantley
BreastScreen SA, Discipline of Medicine, Adelaide University and Directorate of Surgical Pathology, SA Pathology, 167 Flinders Street, Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia.
BreastScreen SA and the Department of Surgery, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2017 Feb;162(1):49-58. doi: 10.1007/s10549-016-4087-2. Epub 2017 Jan 6.
In contemporary practice, 5% of women with non-malignant needle biopsies of screen-detected lesions still require diagnostic open biopsy (OBx). Our aims are to (i) capture a snapshot of the contemporary indications for OBx in screen-detected lesions; (ii) determine upgrade rates to malignancy (DCIS or invasive cancer); (iii) identify indications with sufficiently low upgrades to justify avoidance of OBx and (iv) propose plausible non-surgical alternatives.
Between Jan 2005 and Dec 2014, women assessed for a screen-detected lesion and recommended for OBx are included. We retrieved patient, imaging, biopsy and final pathology or follow-up data.
814 lesions, mean diameter 16.7 mm, microcalcifications in 353 (43.4%) cases, lesions other than calcifications in 461 (56.6%), mean patient age 58.4 yrs, are included. Surgery was performed in 98.2% cases. Imaging follow-up (1-6.5 yrs) is available in 13 of 15 remaining cases. 27 indications for OBx were identified, with a prevalence of 0.3-13.9%. Borderline lesions (BL) comprised 64% of OBx indications, amongst which atypical ductal hyperplasia was the most prevalent at 13.9%, followed by papillary lesions, radial scars, flat epithelial atypia and lobular neoplasia. Imaging factors contributed 26.3% of OBx. In 9.8% of cases, NCB was not performed due to client, technical or cytologic factors. Overall, 261(32.1%) lesions were malignant at OBx. Upgrade rates varied from 0 to 100%, depending on the specific indication for OBx.
Surgical biopsy remains a valuable method of last resort for breast cancer diagnosis but strategies to limit benign breast surgery merit attention as a public health issue.