Abstract

BackgroundIn patients diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) with needle biopsy before surgery, invasive component (IC) is often found in the postoperative tissue, which results in altered post-surgical care. However, there are no clinically available factors to predict IC, and few MRI studies are available for the detection of IC in DCIS patients. The purpose of this study was to evaluate which risk factors can predict IC preoperatively.MethodsPatients with a DCIS diagnosis based on preoperative biopsy, who underwent breast surgery Kangbuk Samsung Hospital between Jan 2005 and June 2018, were retrospectively evaluated. Clinico-pathological and breast MRI factors were compared between DCIS and DCIS with IC in postsurgical specimens.ResultsOf the 431 patients with a preoperative diagnosis of DCIS, 34 (7.9%) showed IC during the postoperative pathological investigations, and 217 (50.3%) underwent breast MRI. Among MRI-related factors, Mass-like enhancement on MRI was the sole but significant predictor of IC (HR = 0.26, C.I. = 0.07–0.93, p = 0.038), while nipple-areolar complex invasion, enhancement peak and pattern were not statistically significant. Nuclear grade was the only significant predictor of IC in the analysis of other clinico-pathological factors (HR = 2.39, C.I. = 1.05–5.42, p = 0.038 in univariate analysis, HR = 2.86, C.I. = 1.14–7.14, p = 0.025 in multivariate analysis).ConclusionsMass-like enhancement on MRI and high nuclear grade were associated with IC in patients with preoperative diagnosis of DCIS. Considering the high sensitivity of breast MRI for IC, further evaluation of the predictive value of MRI in preoperative DCIS patients is desirable.

Highlights

  • In patients diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) with needle biopsy before surgery, invasive component (IC) is often found in the postoperative tissue, which results in altered post-surgical care

  • Patients We retrospectively evaluated the data of 439 patients diagnosed with DCIS based on the pathological analysis of preoperative biopsy specimens of patients who underwent breast surgery at Sungkyunkwan University, Kangbuk Samsung Hospital between Jan 2005 and June 2018

  • These characteristics were compared between patients diagnoses with DCIS and those carrying IC

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Summary

Introduction

In patients diagnosed with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) with needle biopsy before surgery, invasive component (IC) is often found in the postoperative tissue, which results in altered post-surgical care. There are no clinically available factors to predict IC, and few MRI studies are available for the detection of IC in DCIS patients. A sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) is not essential for patients with DCIS, which. The presence of IC in surgical specimens results in upstaging of DCIS to invasive carcinoma, and changing the post-surgical care plan. It seriously degrades patients’ quality of life due to a reoperation for evaluation of axillary lymph node. When breast reconstruction is performed together, it may result in delayed adjuvant chemotherapy or radiotherapy due to complications of the reconstructed site

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