Abstract

As the assessment for radiologic-pathologic concordance, particularly for benign image-guided breast biopsies, is crucial in the management of patients with imaging abnormalities, many health institutions now conduct multidisciplinary conferences to assess the imaging and pathology findings in patients who had image-guided needle biopsy. We aimed to identify the radiologic-pathologic discordance rates and changes in patient outcomes resulting from the implementation of radiologic-pathologic correlation conferences in a community teaching hospital. Twenty-two (5.6%) out of 393 cases presented were deemed discordant given that the imaging characteristics of the lesions were far too suspicious radiologically to correlate with the benign pathology. Six cases were recommended for further imaging (four had stable lesion on follow- up, one was lost to follow-up and one case eventually had surgical excision which showed atypia); 14 cases for repeat core needle/excisional biopsy (seven had surgical excision with benign histology, five did not have surgery but showed stable lesion on imaging, two were lost to follow-up); one case for close imaging follow-up (lesion ultimately disappeared); the remaining case for second opinion (no follow-up data). The rad-path correlation conference led to a higher level of patient care with significant change in practice across our hospital network.

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