Abstract

The new concept in breast cancer diagnosis and treatment is based on a less invasive, more accurate and effective strategy, with a multidisciplinary approach in a specialised breast unit. When indicated, conservative surgery has replaced mastectomy with sentinel-node biopsy substituting routine axillary dissection. But the key factor in respect of these new standards is to confirm the cancer before going to the operating room. Trucut biopsy is performed instead of incisional or excisional biopsy and frozen section. The technique is reliable, simple, and reproducible, and not at all expensive; it can be adapted even for low-income developing countries. Materials and methodsBetween March 2006 and June 2010, 764 patients under clinical suspicion of cancer and/or with BIRADS (Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System) III–V in imaging in one university and one private hospital in Tehran, Iran underwent trucut biopsy (60% palpable and 40% non-palpable lesions). Cancer was found in 30.8% of the cases. In benign pathology, in concordance with clinical and imaging suspicion, surgery was omitted with short-term follow-up. For palpable symptomatic benign lesions surgery was performed to relieve the patient’s symptoms. When the pathology report was not in concordance with clinical/imaging suspicion (1.8%), and in the presence of moderate and severe hyperplasia with or without atypia, in lobular and papillary lesions (4.9%) open biopsy was done to rule out cancer (10 added cancers, 1.3%; total cancers 32.1%). Cancer surgery was done as a single procedure in 89.8% of cases. ConclusionTrucut biopsy for breast lesion assessment is the first step toward a new concept in breast cancer care. It is simple, reduces the number of surgeries (no surgery for non-symptomatic benign lesions and one surgery for cancer), and avoids diagnostic errors with full respect for the patient’s rights. We insist on its routine use to extend international guidelines while decreasing the total cost of this common disease in all low-resource countries.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call