| Literature DB >> 29473859 |
Tanya W Moseley1, Ashley Stanley2,3, Wei Wei4, Jay R Parikh5.
Abstract
Newly diagnosed breast abscesses are generally treated as a medical emergency that may necessitate immediate interventional treatment. At our institution, there is no in-house after-hours coverage for breast ultrasonography. We could find no peer-reviewed studies on the cost-effectiveness or clinical management impact of on-call ultrasound technologist coverage for imaging of breast abscesses. The purposes of this study were to determine the incidence of breast abscess in patients with clinical findings highly suggestive of abscess, identify clinical factors associated with breast abscess in such patients, and determine the impact of after-hours emergent or urgent breast ultrasonography on the clinical management of breast abscesses in both outpatients and inpatients. We retrospectively reviewed 100 after-hours breast ultrasound studies performed at our tertiary care center from 2011 to 2015 for evaluation of a suspected breast abscess. Only 26% of our patients with clinically suspected abscess ultimately had a confirmed abscess. Factors associated with breast abscess were a palpable abnormality and a history of breast surgery within the eight weeks before presentation. After-hours diagnosis of an abscess was associated with after-hours clinical intervention. Of the 74 patients in whom after-hours ultrasound imaging showed no evidence of abscess, only three patients underwent after-hours drainage. Our findings support overnight and weekend breast ultrasound coverage in large tertiary care centers.Entities:
Keywords: after-hours imaging; breast abscess; breast ultrasound; urgent or emergent imaging
Year: 2018 PMID: 29473859 PMCID: PMC5872000 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics8010017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Patient characteristics overall and by abscess status.
| Characteristic | Abscess | All | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | |||
| Patient type | ||||
| Emergency department | 20 (76.9) | 6 (23.1) | 0.92 | 26 (26.0) |
| Inpatient | 33 (73.3) | 12 (26.7) | 45 (45.0) | |
| Outpatient | 21 (72.4) | 8 (27.6) | 29 (29.0) | |
| Fever | ||||
| No | 52 (75.4) | 17 (24.6) | 0.63 | 69 (69.00) |
| Yes | 22 (71.0) | 9 (29.0) | 31 (31.0) | |
| Redness | ||||
| No | 22 (81.5) | 5 (18.5) | 0.44 | 27 (27.0) |
| Yes | 52 (71.2) | 21 (28.8) | 73 (73.0) | |
| Swelling | ||||
| Unknown | 1 (100.0) | 0 (0) | 1 (1.0) | |
| No | 37 (75.5) | 12 (24.5) | 0.82 | 49 (49.0) |
| Yes | 36 (72.0) | 14 (28.0) | 50 (50.0) | |
| Focal pain | ||||
| No | 68 (73.1) | 25 (26.9) | 0.67 | 93 (93.0) |
| Yes | 6 (85.7) | 1 (14.3) | 7 (7.0) | |
| Palpable abnormality | ||||
| Unknown | 1 (100.0) | 0 (0) | 1 (1.0) | |
| No | 69 (76.7) | 21 (23.3) | 0.05 | 90 (90.0) |
| Yes | 4 (44.4) | 5 (55.6) | 9 (9.0) | |
| History of breast abscess | ||||
| No | 68 (74.7) | 23 (25.3) | 0.69 | 91 (91.0) |
| Yes | 6 (66.7) | 3 (33.3) | 9 (9.0) | |
| History of breast cancer | ||||
| No | 10 (90.9) | 1 (9.1) | 0.28 | 11 (11.0) |
| Yes | 64 (71.9) | 25 (28.1) | 89 (89.0) | |
| Smoking status | ||||
| Unknown | 1 (50.0) | 1 (50.0) | 2 (2.0) | |
| No | 70 (76.1) | 22 (23.9) | 0.17 | 92 (92.0) |
| Yes | 3 (50.0) | 3 (50.0) | 6 (6.0) | |
| Diabetes mellitus | ||||
| No | 65 (74.7) | 22 (25.3) | 0.74 | 87 (87.0) |
| Yes | 9 (69.2) | 4 (30.8) | 13 (13.0) | |
| Immunocompromised | ||||
| No | 62 (77.5) | 18 (22.5) | 0.15 | 80 (80.0) |
| Yes | 12 (60.0) | 8 (40.0) | 20 (20.0) | |
| Surgery in preceding 8 weeks | ||||
| No | 35 (87.5) | 5 (12.5) | 0.02 | 40 (40.0) |
| Yes | 39 (65.0) | 21 (35.0) | 60 (60.0) | |
| After-hours interventional treatment | ||||
| No | 71 (78.9) | 19 (21.1) | 0.003 | 90 (90.0) |
| Yes | 3 (30.0) | 7 (70.0) | 10 (10.0) | |