Staging primary breast cancer. Are there tumour pathological features that correlate with a false-negative axillary ultrasound?
S. Johnson, S. Brown, G. Portera, J. Steela, K. Paisleya, R. Watkinsa and C. Holgate
Clinical Radiology 2011 66;6:497-499
Link to Journal
Of 155 women with normal ultrasounds, 45 (29%) were node positive at axillary surgery. Breast tumour size was significantly different with the average size smaller in the true-negative group: 21 versus 30 mm (p < 0.02). The histological type varied significantly between the groups, with more lobular carcinomas in the false-negative group [6/110 (5%) versus 6/45 (13%), p < 0.001]. The false-negative group was also more likely to show lymphovascular invasion in the breast [6/110 (5%) versus 14/45 (31%), p < 0.001]. There was no significant difference in tumour grade or ER status.
The present study has found significant differences in tumour characteristics between women with true-negative and false-negative axillary staging ultrasound in terms of size, primary tumour histological type and presence of lymphovascular invasion. In particular, axillary ultrasound in primary lobular carcinoma may be less accurate and a negative result is more likely to be spurious than with primary ductal carcinomas.
Saturday, 30 April 2011
Staging primary breast cancer. Are there tumour pathological features that correlate with a false-negative axillary ultrasound?
Labels:
axilla,
breast cancer,
false negative,
staging,
ultrasound
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