Abstract

Some women die despite the favorable prognosis of small breast cancers. Breast ultrasound features may reflect pathological and biological characteristics of a breast tumor. This study aimed to explore whether ultrasound features could identify small breast cancers with poor outcomes. This retrospective study examined confirmed breast cancers with a size of <20mm diagnosed in our hospital between 02/2008 and 08/2019. Clinicopathological and ultrasound features were compared between alive and deceased breast cancer patients. Survival was analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier curves. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards models were used to examine the factors associated with breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS) and disease-free survival (DFS). Among the 790 patients, the median follow-up was 3.5 years. The deceased group showed higher frequencies of spiculated (36.7% vs. 11.2%, P<0.001), anti-parallel orientation (43.3% vs. 15.4%, P<0.001), and spiculated morphology combined with anti-parallel orientation (30.0% vs. 2.4%, P<0.001). Among 27 patients with spiculated morphology and anti-parallel orientation, nine cancer-specific deaths and 11 recurrences occurred, for a 5-year BCSS of 77.8% and DFS of 66.7%, while 21 breast-cancer deaths and 41 recurrences occurred among the remaining patients with higher 5-year BCSS (97.8%, P<0.001) and DFS (95.4%, P<0.001). Spiculated and anti-parallel orientation (HR=7.45, 95%CI: 3.26-17.00; HR=6.42, 95%CI: 3.19-12.93), age ≥55 years (HR=5.94, 95%CI: 2.24-15.72; HR=1.98, 95%CI: 1.11-3.54), and lymph nodes metastasis (HR=3.99, 95%CI: 1.89-8.43; HR=2.99, 95%CI: 1.71-5.23) were independently associated with poor BCSS and DFS. Spiculated and anti-parallel orientation at ultrasound are associated with poor BCSS and DFS in patients with primary breast cancer <20mm.

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