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  • Title: Results from a multidisciplinary breast center. Analysis of disease discovered.
    Author: Silverstein MJ, Gamagami P, Masetti R, Legmann MD, Craig PH, Gierson ED.
    Journal: Surg Oncol Clin N Am; 1997 Apr; 6(2):301-14. PubMed ID: 9115497.
    Abstract:
    This study was undertaken to report the clinical, pathologic, and outcome data of our nonrandomized series of patients with nonpalpable breast cancer and to understand better the differences between patients with palpable and nonpalpable lesions, particularly those patients aged 49 and younger. The clinical, pathologic, recurrence, and survival data from 560 patients with nonpalpable breast carcinomas found by mammography and wire-directed breast biopsy were compared with similar data from 1640 patients who presented with palpable breast cancer (see Table 3). All node dissections in patients with noninvasive disease were negative. In patients with invasive breast cancer, the chances of axillary node involvement increased as lesions increased in size. When patients were grouped by tumor size, nodal involvement was more likely for palpable than nonpalpable lesions. The 10-year disease-free survival rate probability for patients with nonpalpable invasive cancer was 81% compared with 65% for patients with palpable invasive cancer. The 10-year breast cancer-specific survival rate (including deaths only from carcinoma of the breast) was 91% versus 73%, whereas the 10-year overall survival (rate including deaths from any cause) was 79% for nonpalpable invasive cancer versus 68% for patients with palpable invasive cancer (all P values < 0.001) (see Table 6). Patients under age 50 with nonpalpable invasive cancer fared just as well as older patients with nonpalpable invasive cancer; both had 10-year breast cancer-specific survival rates of 94% (see Table 8). However, biopsy of nonpalpable lesions in patients aged 49 and younger was only half as likely to reveal cancer than biopsy of nonpalpable lesions in patients aged 50 and older (17% versus 32%, P < 0.0001) (see Table 7). When cancer was found in younger women, it was more likely to be noninvasive. Wire-directed breast biopsy of nonpalpable mammographically suspicious areas yields a subgroup of breast cancer patients with a lower probability of recurrence and a higher probability of survival at 10 years when compared with patients who present with palpable breast cancer.
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