Abstract
Stereotactic fine needle aspiration biopsy (SFNB) was carried out on 404 mammographically detected impalpable breast lesions from 389 women between October 1988 and January 1990. Seventy-three lesions were excised, and 38 were carcinomas. Thirty-six of the 38 carcinomas had been diagnosed as atypical, suspicious or malignant by cytology; in the remaining 2 only fat and fibrous tissue were present in smears. The sensitivity of cytological diagnosis in detecting malignancy was therefore 94.8% (36 of 38 cases). A cytological diagnosis of malignancy was made in 23 cases (5.7%) and in 5 (1.2%) the findings were suspicious of malignancy. All of these were confirmed as carcinoma histologically; the predictive value of a positive cytological diagnosis was therefore 100%. In 32 cases (7.9%) the cytological findings were atypical but inconclusive. Twenty-three of these lesions were excised, and 8 proved to be carcinoma (34.8%). No case assessed radiologically and cytologically as benign has subsequently proven to be malignant. Twenty-two of 28 cases of invasive carcinoma were given an unequivocal cytological diagnosis of malignancy; 2 were suspicious of malignancy, and in 3 the findings were atypical but inconclusive. Of the 10 pure duct carcinoma-in-situ (DCIS) lesions, (26.3% of the cancers) 1 was diagnosed cytologically as malignant, 3 as suspicious of malignancy, and 5 as atypical. The sensitivity of SFNB in detecting DCIS lesions was therefore similar to invasive carcinomas, but cases of DCIS were more likely to be given a suspicious or atypical diagnosis rather than a definite diagnosis of malignancy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Published Version
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