The authors reviewed their institution's experience treating patients with mammographically detected ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast with breast-conserving therapy (BCT) to determine 10-year rates of local control and survival and to identify factors associated with local recurrence.
Patterns of mammographically detected calcifications after breast-conserving therapy associated with tumor recurrence
โ Scribed by D. David Dershaw; Catherine S. Giess; Beryl McCormick; Patrick Borgen; Laura Liberman; Andrea F. Abramson; Elizabeth Morris
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 191 KB
- Volume
- 79
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
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โฆ Synopsis
Background:
Some authors have suggested that mammographically evident calcifications that would be considered benign in other situations can be due to carcinoma in women who have undergone breast conservation. this study was undertaken to determine if the pattern of calcifications associated with recurrent tumors detected mammographically differs from that observed in carcinomas developing de novo.
Methods:
Mammograms of 22 cases of local tumor recurrence were retrospectively reviewed, and calcifications associated with recurrence were characterized according to the american college of radiology breast imaging reporting and data system (bi-rads) classification.
Results:
Tumors were usually associated with > or = 10 calcifications (77%; 17 of 22 cases). recurrences commonly contained very suspicious patterns of calcifications with linear forms present in 15 cases (68%) and pleomorphic calcifications present in 17 cases (77%). the distribution of calcifications was usually clustered (73%; 16 of 22 cases) or segmental (18%; 4 of 22 cases). recurrences were usually obviously malignant (bi-rads category 5), and were characterized as such in 77% of cases. the remainder were indeterminate, requiring biopsy (bi-rads category 4). recurrent tumors containing calcifications always contained some suspicious forms. less worrisome types of calcifications were sometimes observed, including punctate calcifications in 36% and coarse calcifications in 14% of cases, but were always associated with more malignant patterns.
Conclusions:
Local tumor recurrences, when associated with mammographically evident calcifications, usually have a pattern highly suspicious for malignancy, although indeterminate forms can be the only calcifications present. characteristically benign patterns of calcifications are not observed in recurrent tumors unless they are associated with more suspicious calcifications. therefore, women without more worrisome patterns need not undergo biopsy because of the presence of these nonworrisome calcifications.
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