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Upstage Rate of Complex Sclerosing Lesions/Radial Scars

Authors :
Veronica M, Jones
Jane B, Pearce
Maryam, Khalil
Olivia, Cain
Daniel, Coldren
Harrison, Martin
Marissa, Howard-McNatt
Edward, Levine
Akiko, Chiba
Source :
The American Surgeon. 88:964-967
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2022.

Abstract

Background Radial scars (RS) and complex sclerosing lesions (CSL) are breast radiologic findings described as small, stellate lesions causing architectural distortion. This can mimic malignancy. Core needle biopsy (CNB) is often performed. Advances in breast imaging have led to increased detection of RS/CSL. The upstage rate of RS/CSL to in situ or invasive disease is 0-40%. We sought to determine the upstaging rate of RS/CSL to in situ, invasive disease, or high-risk lesion at our institution to create excision guidelines. Methods The pathology database of a single center was searched for RS/CSL, from January 2013 to September 2020. We included CNB without malignancy or high-risk lesion (eg, atypical ductal hyperplasia). Patient demographics, indications for biopsy, imaging findings, biopsy procedure, and final pathology were collected. Results Forty-four patients were included. 52.3% had CNB for architectural distortion on mammography, 18.2% for mass, 11.4% for calcifications, 2.3% for abnormal MRI, and 15.9% for multiple reasons (eg, calcifications and mass). Most had an ultrasound: 43.2% had no abnormality and 34.1% had a mass. All CNB were vacuum assisted, 65.9% with 9-gauge needle, and averaged 10.0 cores. 77.3% were stereotactic biopsies, 13.6% ultrasound, and 6.8% MRI. 59.1% had excision after CNB. 82.1% of patients did not upstage. One patient upstaged to invasive ductal carcinoma (3.6%) and two patients to high-risk lesion (7.1%). Discussion There was low upstage rate of RS/CSL on excisional biopsy. Centers could consider close surveillance for RS/CSL on CNB. Longer follow-up in cases of deferred excision is needed to ensure oncologic safety.

Details

ISSN :
15559823 and 00031348
Volume :
88
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Surgeon
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....132fea91dd71c72a1c8ebebd01b785b1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/00031348211056282