Mammogram, not biopsy, for breast lesions
SEATTLE, May 9 (UPI) -- U.S. researchers say a woman with
benign-looking breast lesions should not get not a biopsy but a
follow-up mammogram.
In a study published in American Journal of Roentgenology,
researchers said six-month short-interval follow-up diagnostic
mammogram had an 83 percent sensitivity rating -- meaning a
relatively high proportion of true cancers were being identified,
with a low proportion of cases mistakenly deemed benign.
"Because the probability of cancer is so low, we don't want
to put the patient through an unnecessary biopsy, which is an
invasive procedure that increases both patient anxiety and medical
costs," study lead author Erin J. Aiello Bowles of the Group Health
Center for Health Studies in Seattle said in a statement.
The study included 45,007 initial short-interval follow-up
mammograms. In the study, 360 women with "probably benign" lesions
were diagnosed with breast cancer within six months, and 506 women
were diagnosed with cancer within 12 months.
The approximately one out of a 100 probably benign lesions
linked to a cancer diagnosis within the year points to a need to
monitor these patients, because "we want to detect the cancers as
early as possible," Bowles said. After the six-month diagnostic
mammograms, follow-ups should continue for the next two to three
years "until long-term stability is demonstrated."
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