Pete Raphaël, Pinard Céleste, Sirodot Fanny, Molnar Ioana, Dressaire Margot, Ginzac Angeline, Abrial Catherine, Durando Xavier, Tekath Marielle
Unité de Sénologie, Centre Jean PERRIN, Clermont-Ferrand, France.
Service de Radiologie, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Clermont-Ferrand, France.
BMC Cancer. 2025 Jan 22;25(1):123. doi: 10.1186/s12885-025-13453-0.
Most breast cancers are detected at an early stage in which case conservative surgery is indicated. An accurate preoperative localization technique is essential for conservative surgery of non-palpable breast lesions. Currently, the gold standard technique is wire localization (WL). However, this technique has well-known drawbacks. Several wire-free techniques have been developed to overcome these drawbacks; one technique is localisation by Radiofrequency Identification (RFID). The purpose of this clinical trial was to assess the superiority of RFID tags (HOLOGIC) in terms of patient satisfaction, over wire localization of non-palpable breast lesions.
This was a single-centre, prospective, controlled and non-interventional trial. Patients were followed from their inclusion at the time of the preoperative consultation to the postoperative consultation, one month after surgery. Data on anxiety and satisfaction was collected from patients and clinicians using questionnaires, and clinical data was collected from the medical files. The primary outcome was the patients' satisfaction scores, assessed using a visual analogue scale.
Eighty patients were sequentially enrolled in two groups: the wire group (n = 40) and the RFID group (n = 40). One patient from the RFID group was excluded from the analysis because of a substantial migration during deployment. On a 10-point Visual Analogue Scale, the patients' median satisfaction score was 9.8 (IQR = 1.32) for the wire group and 10 (IQR = 0.07) for the RFID group (p < 0.001). A reduction in pain between device insertion and surgery was observed in the RFID group (p = 0.009). The median placement time was shorter in the RFID group (15 min, IQR = 6) than in the wire group (20 min, IQR = 30) (p = 0.01).
Our results show a statistically significant difference in median patient satisfaction score with the localization of non-palpable breast cancer lesions using RFID tags compared to the use of the WL. Although our results did not show clinically significant outcomes in terms of satisfaction, RFID tags are a reliable alternative to WL and simplify the organization of patients' healthcare trajectories.
ClinicalTrials.gov ID; NCT04750889 registered on February 11, 2021. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04750889?term=rfid&draw=2&rank=1.
大多数乳腺癌在早期被发现,此时适合进行保守手术。准确的术前定位技术对于不可触及乳腺病变的保守手术至关重要。目前,金标准技术是钢丝定位(WL)。然而,该技术存在众所周知的缺点。已经开发了几种无钢丝技术来克服这些缺点;其中一种技术是通过射频识别(RFID)进行定位。本临床试验的目的是评估RFID标签(HOLOGIC)在患者满意度方面相对于不可触及乳腺病变的钢丝定位的优越性。
这是一项单中心、前瞻性、对照和非干预性试验。从术前咨询时纳入患者开始,随访至术后一个月的术后咨询。使用问卷从患者和临床医生处收集焦虑和满意度数据,并从医疗档案中收集临床数据。主要结局是使用视觉模拟量表评估的患者满意度得分。
80名患者依次被纳入两组:钢丝组(n = 40)和RFID组(n = 40)。RFID组的一名患者因在部署过程中发生大量移位而被排除在分析之外。在10分制视觉模拟量表上,钢丝组患者的中位满意度得分为9.8(IQR = 1.32),RFID组为10(IQR = 0.07)(p < 0.001)。RFID组在设备插入与手术之间的疼痛减轻(p = 0.009)。RFID组的中位放置时间(15分钟,IQR = 6)比钢丝组(20分钟,IQR = 30)短(p = 0.01)。
我们的结果表明,与使用WL相比,使用RFID标签对不可触及乳腺癌病变进行定位时,患者中位满意度得分存在统计学上的显著差异。尽管我们的结果在满意度方面未显示出临床显著结果,但RFID标签是WL的可靠替代方案,简化了患者医疗轨迹的安排。
ClinicalTrials.gov标识符;NCT04750889于2021年2月11日注册。https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04750889?term=rfid&draw=2&rank=1 。