Abstract

There is little information regarding sentinel lymph node (SLN) frozen-section examination in patients with a history of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). We evaluated the usage, clinical impact, and pathology resources used for SLN cryosectioning in mastectomy cases with a DCIS history. Mastectomies with SLNs submitted from 2012 to 2013 at a tertiary care center were analyzed. Medicare reimbursement was used to estimate pathology health care expenditures of intraoperative frozen sections. There was no difference in the rate of SLN frozen-section examination or parts submitted, total blocks frozen, total blocks submitted, or total SLNs identified per case between the DCIS (n = 139) and invasive (n = 369) groups. Nine patients with DCIS had SLN metastases (three macrometastases, two micrometastases, and four isolated tumor cells), all of which were examined by frozen section. Only the macrometastases were identified by cryosectioning, which led to two synchronous axillary lymph node dissections that did not yield any additional positive nodes. A total of $19,313 was spent for pathology per DCIS patient with surgical management affected, whereas only $1,019 was spent per invasive carcinoma patient affected. Decreasing SLN frozen-section use in patients with a history of DCIS represents an opportunity for pathology cost containment.

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