Retrospective analysis of the accuracy of ultrasound-guided core needle biopsy in the diagnosis of breast invasive ductal carcinoma: experience in Chinese population

The Breast ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. S63
Author(s):  
W. Wang ◽  
H. Xing ◽  
K. Wang ◽  
X. Zhai ◽  
L. Tang
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 1039-1054
Author(s):  
Alyaa Saad Bunyan ◽  
◽  
Sarah Saad Bonyan ◽  
Akeel Saad Bonyan ◽  
◽  
...  

Back ground: Breast microcalcifications are considered an early mammographic sign of breast cancer which are present with tiny bright spots of different morphology. In an ultrasound (US) image, the presence of microcalcifications within breast is an important indicator of malignancy.With an improved sonographic detection of microcalcification, ultrasound could be used for biopsy guidance for target sampling of tissue containing suspicious microcalcifications. If the biopsied lesions had a suspicious microcalcifications, specimen radiograph is mandatory to confirm the presence of microcalcifications in which a core containing any calcification on specimen radiography was defined as asuccessfully retrieved core. 14-G(Gauge) semi-automated core needle biopsy(CNB) device is less costly than other biopsy device. Methods:A prospective study was conducted on thirty female patients with thirty- two lesions their mean age was 48.53 years (age range, 21-75 years) radiologically classified as BIRADS (Breast Imaging Reporting and Data system) 4 (b, c) and5 from those referred to women imaging health unit in Radiology department for Sono- Mammography and those patients were referred from the inpatient wards and outpatient clinics of the surgery departments during the period from September 2018 till May 2019.All patients underwent conventional digital mammography and B-mode ultrasound examination and Ultrasound guided biopsy, specimen radiography then tissue samples were sent to histopathology department in which slide picture was done.Then (28) females done surgery and (2) patient still for follow up. Results: Radiological diagnosis of our lesions using BIRADS(Breast Imaging Reporting and Data system) categorical method were identified as two intermediate suspicious lesions (BIRADS 4B 6.3 %), twelve moderate suspicious lesions (BIRADS 4C 34.4 %), and 19 highly suggestive of malignancy lesions (BIRADS 5 59.4 %). Retrieval rate of calcifications according to specimen radiography were successfully retrieved in 30/32 lesions (93.8 %) and confirmed on specimen radiography .CNB( core needle biopsy) identified 28 lesions (87.5 %) malignant and four (12.5 %) benign lesions. Distribution of lesions according to pathological diagnosis in successful and fail retrieval group, the successful retrieval group comprised 26 malignant (22 IDC(Invasive ductal carcinoma), 2 DCIS(Ductal carcinoma Insitu), 2 ILC(Invasive Lobuler carcinoma) ) and four benign lesions.After CNB( core needle biopsy), 30 lesions underwent surgical excision and final pathology results were provided. All 24 IDC on 14-G semi-automated CNB (core needle biopsy) were confirmed to be IDC(Invasive ductal carcinoma) on final pathology. Of the two DCIS(Ductal carcinoma Insitu) on US(Ultrasound) guided CNB( core needle biopsy), one DCIS, were upgraded to IDC, the other one confirmed to be DCIS on final pathology,the two ILC were confirmed to be ILC on final pathology.Of the four benign lesions, the two ADH(Atypical Ductal hyperplasia) underwent surgical excision, finally diagnosed as DCIS,the other two benign lesions (fibroadenoma and fibroadenosis) their BIRADS assessments were category 4C and were recommended for follow-up.The overall accuracy of US-guided 14-G(Gauge) semi-automated CNB( core needle biopsy) was 90.0 % (27/32). Conclusion: The present study confirms the good retrieval rate (93.8%) of US-guided 14-G semi-automated CNB and diagnostic accuracy of (90.0%). Thus, this could be useful procedure for suspicious microcalcifications apparent on sonography.Specimen radiography proved to be a great help in deciding the accurate retrieval of microclcifications by core biopsy. It should be done in all cases of core biopsy for calcifications with marking of the core containing calcifications to be specially assessed by histopathology. We should try to do core biopsy before using VAB (Vaccum-Assisted Biobsy)for calcifications if well seen by ultrasound.


Parasite ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. 19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mesut Bulakci ◽  
Mehmet Ilhan ◽  
Suleyman Bademler ◽  
Erdem Yilmaz ◽  
Mine Gulluoglu ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fahdi Kanavati ◽  
Masayuki Tsuneki

Invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) is the most common form of breast cancer. For the non-operative diagnosis of breast carcinoma, core needle biopsy has been widely used in recent years which allows evaluation of both cytologic and tissue architectural features; so that it can provide a definitive diagnosis between IDC and benign lesion (e.g., fibroadenoma). Histopathological diagnosis based on core needle biopsy specimens is currently the cost effective method; therefore, it is an area that could benefit from AI-based tools to aid pathologists in their pathological diagnosis workflows. In this paper, we trained an Invasive Ductal Carcinoma (IDC) Whole Slide Image (WSI) classification model using transfer learning and weakly-supervised learning. We evaluated the model on a core needle biopsy (n=522) test set as well as three surgical test sets (n=1,129) obtaining ROC AUCs in the range of 0.95-0.98.


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