Several methods of breast biopsy now
exist. The most appropriate method of biopsy for a patient depends upon a variety of
factors, including the size, location, appearance and characteristics of the breast
abnormality. Click on one of the biopsy methods below for a detailed explanation of the
procedure.
Summary of Breast Biopsy Methods |
| Type |
Used
For |
Needle Sample size |
Anesthesia |
Pros |
Cons |
| Fine Needle Aspiration (FNA) |
Cysts;
sometimes also used to sample cells from masses with or without calcifications |
22
or 25 gauge needle; several (5-6) samples of fluids and/or cells are removed |
Local
or none |
Fastest
and easiest method; results rapidly available; no stitches or scar; excellent for cysts |
Small
sample size may cause incomplete assessment or misdiagnosis; multiple needle insertions;
operator dependent |
| Core Needle |
Sample
tissue from solid mass or calcium deposits |
10,
11, or 14 gauge needle; several (5-6) samples are removed |
Local |
Larger
sample than FNA can lead to more accurate diagnosis; no stitches or internal scar |
Multiple
needle insertions; limited sample size may underestimate more serious diagnosis |
| Vacuum-Assisted (Mammotome or MIBB) |
Primarily
used for calcifications |
11
or 14 gauge needle. Requires 0.25 inch incision (approx. 0.6 cm); several (8-10) samples
are removed |
Local |
Excellent
for calcium deposits; removes several large samples with one needle insertion; no
stitches; minimal scar |
May
be less accurate than surgical biopsy which removes entire lesion; not ideal for
hard-to-reach lesions (i.e., near chest wall); operator dependent |
| Large Core Surgical (ABBI) |
Primarily
used for nonpalpable (unable to feel) masses and/or calcifications |
5mm-20mm
to cylinder of breast tissue is removed (approx. size and shape of wine cork) |
Local |
Provides
large sample without heavy sedation (as with surgical biopsy) |
Removes
large amount of normal tissue before reaching lesion, may not remove adequate margin of
tissue around lesion; requires stitches; scar |
| Open Surgical |
Masses,
hard-to-reach lesions, (i.e. near chest wall) multiple lesions; masses with
micro-calcifications |
Requires
1.5 to 2 inch incision (approx. 4.0 to 5.0 cm); golf ball size area of tissue or more is
removed |
Heavy
sedation; sometimes general anesthesia |
Yields
largest tissue sample; most accurate method of diagnosis (near 100%) |
Causes
permanent scar that may make future mammograms difficult to read; possible breast
disfigurement; requires stitches and longer recovery |