| Literature DB >> 27026943 |
Anabel M Scaranelo1, Hadas Moshonov2, Jaime Escallon3.
Abstract
To investigate the role of high-resolution specimen sonography (SS) to determine the precise location of the targeted lesion in relation to the six surgical margins; the specimen digital radiography isocenter and the correlation with the rate of re-excision and residual tumour. Freshly excised surgical specimens were scanned by a breast radiologist using a high-frequency linear transducer in a cohort of 25 consecutive women undergoing breast conservation. Sonographic measurements of radial distances from all six margins (superior, inferior, lateral, medial, anterior and posterior) were obtained. Sonographic positive margin status was defined as targeted mass identified <5 mm from the tissue edge. The paired t test was used for statistical comparisons between sonographic and pathological measurements. The median cancer size was 15 mm (range 3.80-42 mm; 95 % CI 9.8-18) on sonography and 16 mm (range 2-60 mm; 95 % CI 15-20) on surgical pathology. SS showed 100 % sensitivity and 59 % specificity in the evaluation of surgical pathology margins. 20 % (5 of 25) patients had positive margins where 60 % were in situ carcinoma. The likelihood of carcinoma at the initial surgical margins was significantly higher in dense breasts (3/6 = 50 % vs 1/17 = 5.8 %; p = 0.04). The deviation of the isocenter of the specimens was found not significant. SS is a valuable tool for identify the cancer within the specimen, and better asses the margins. It is of significant importance in patients with dense breasts where specimen radiography is of limited value.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Margins; Sonography; Specimen
Year: 2016 PMID: 27026943 PMCID: PMC4773321 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-1921-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Fig. 1Photograph of an intra operative breast specimen with the inked edges: blue ink used to demonstrate the anterior–superior margin and green ink to stain the anterior–inferior margin. In addition, a short-stitch is placed by the surgeon on the anterior–superior margin and a long-stitch is left to demarcate the lateral margin
Fig. 2a Sonographic imaging of an intra operative breast specimen with identification of the targeted breast cancer. b Digital radiography of the same specimen shows dense tissue without identification of the cancer
Study population characteristics
| Histopathology | Number of patients | Mean patient age (years) | Number of specimens | Number of hook-wired lesions | Mean specimen volume (ml) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IDC | 5 | 71 | 5 | 5 | 58 |
| IDC + DCIS | 13 | 57 | 13 | 13 | 66 |
| ILC | 3 | 71 | 3 | 3 | 79 |
| Mixed IDC + ILC | 1 | 59 | 1 | 1 | 90.8 |
| Multifocal IDC | 3 | 55 | 3 | 5 | 120 |
| Total | 25 | 61 | 25 | 27 | 76.6 |
DCIS ductal carcinoma in situ, IDC invasive ductal carcinoma, ILC invasive lobular carcinoma
Comparison of specimen sonography margins with surgical pathology
| Surgical pathology | Margins report | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | Negative | ||
| Specimen sonography | |||
| Positive | 4 (true positive) | 10 (false positive) | 14 |
| Negative | 0 (false negative) | 13 (true negative) | 13 |
| Total | 4 | 23 | 27 |
Features associated with presence of in situ or invasive carcinoma at surgical specimen margins
| Feature analysed | Number of cases with cancer at margins (%) | p value |
|---|---|---|
| Breast density | ||
| Density “c” + density “d” | 3/6 (50) | 0.05 |
| Density “a” + density “b” | 1/17 (5.8) | |
| Clinical presentation | ||
| Palpable lump | 2/14 (14.2) | 0.68 |
| Non-palpable | 2/9 (22.2) | |
| Lesion size on US | ||
| <1.5 cm | 2/10 (20) | 0.48 |
| ≥1.5 cm | 2/13 (15.3) | |
| Volume of specimen | ||
| <50 ml | 1/10 (10) | 0.80 |
| ≥50 ml | 3/13 (23) | |