Abstract

The aim of this study was to determine the accuracy of fine-needle aspiration (FNA) and core needle biopsy (CNB) for palpable breast tumors (PBTs). FNA and CNB of 492 PBTs from 477 patients were analyzed. Tumors were malignant in 473 cases and benign in 19 cases. There was a strong correlation (P > .05) between FNA and CNB in terms of malignancy. Among 473 malignant tumors, FNA had better accuracy and less unsatisfactory results (95.6%; 2.7%) than CNB (94.9%; 4.9%). Among 19 benign tumors, CNB was accurate in 100% compared to 94.7% using FNA. There were only two (0.4%) cases where result was unsatisfactory by both FNA and CNB. NPV was 56.3% for FNA, 43.2% for CNB, and 95.0% for FNA and CNB combined. Sensitivity was 97.0% for FNA, 94.7% for CNB, and 99.8% for FNA and CNB combined. PPV and specificity was 100% for FNA and CNB both separately and combined. Combined use of FNA with CNB is an optimal diagnostic method for PBTs. In our opinion, this should be recommended as standard for diagnosis of PBTs.

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