Abstract

Determine the positive predictive value (PPV) of biopsy of palpable masses following mastectomy (MX). Determine if there are patient characteristics, tumor, or imaging features more predictive of cancer. IRB-approved retrospective review of 16396 breast ultrasounds June 2008-December 2015 identified patients with MX presenting with palpable masses. Medical records and imaging studies were reviewed. Statistical analysis was performed using Fisher's exact test. 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated. In all, 117 patients presented with palpable masses on the MX side. 101/117 patients who had a palpable mass on physical examination had a true sonographic mass to correlate with the clinical findings. 91/101 (90%) underwent biopsy: 19/91 (21%, 95% CI; 13-31) biopsies were malignant. 72/91 (79%) were benign. All 19 cancers were on the original cancer side. Recurrences ranged from 0.4 to 4.5cm maximum diameter, mean 1.3cm. Prophylactic vs therapeutic mastectomy was very statistically significant (P=.01). The use of tamoxifen or an AI was also statistically significant (P=.04). Patient age (P=1.0), radiation therapy (P=1.05), chemotherapy (P=.2), immediate breast reconstruction (P=.2), or implant vs flap (P=.2) had no statistically significant association with finding cancer on biopsy. Lesion shape (irregular vs oval/round) was highly statistically significant (P=.0003) as was non-parallel orientation on ultrasound (P=.008). Circumscribed vs non-circumscribed margins was also statistically significant (P=.008). The PPV of biopsy of palpable masses on the side of MX was 21% (95% CI; 13-31). All recurrences were on the original cancer side and this was very statistically significant.

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