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According to a October 1, 1998 report
released by the National Association of Breast Cancer Organizations (NABCO), the majority
of women who undergo breast biopsies are not informed that newer,
less-invasive invasive biopsy techniques are available. The nationwide survey of 250
American women who had undergone breast biopsies between 1995 and 1998 showed that 80%
received traditional open surgical procedures and only 20% received
less invasive, percutaneous ("through the skin") biopsy procedures such as vacuum-assisted or core needle biopsies.
Fully two-thirds of those polled had been unaware of the new minimally invasive biopsy
methods and said their doctors did not discuss different biopsy options with them.
The survey was conducted by Roper
Starch Worldwide, an independent polling firm and was commissioned by NABCO and Ethicon
Endo-Surgery, Inc., a Johnson & Johnson company that makes a minimally invasive biopsy
device called Mammotome.
In order to determine whether an area
of concern in a breast (found by mammography, clinical exam or self exam)
is malignant (cancerous) or benign (not cancerous), a physician may perform a biopsy. A
breast biopsy is the removal of a sample of breast tissue for laboratory examination by a
pathologist and is the only definitive way to determine if an abnormality is cancerous or
not.
Open
surgical biopsies remove considerably more tissue than minimally invasive biopsies and
generally lead to more complications than the newer minimally invasive techniques. Open
biopsies can be performed under general anesthesia, which carries additional risks, and
involve more post-operative bleeding and infection. They also may require an overnight
(inpatient) hospital stay.
Minimally invasive techniques,
including vacuum assisted biopsy and core
needle biopsy, involve removing less tissue, yield less scarring and pain, involve
only local anesthesia and can be done on an outpatient basis. Minimally invasive biopsy
relies on advanced imaging to help guide the interventional
radiologist or surgeon to the breast abnormality. With percutaneous biopsy, only small
samples of tissue are removed, as opposed to open biopsy, which removes the entire
suspicious area(s). Since 65% to 80% of biopsies are benign, removing the entire
suspicious area is not necessary in many of cases.
"The information {about the
availability of minimally invasive techniques} is just not out there among the physicians
or the ladies themselves," said interventional radiologist Dr. Steve H. Parker,
medical director of the Sally Jobe Breast Centre in Denver. Image-guided, minimally
invasive breast biopsy techniques have been available since the early 1990s. "The
technique of minimally invasive biopsies, I believe, ought to be the new gold
standard," he said. "There are multiple peer-reviewed studies establishing that
these newer techniques are just as accurate in diagnosing breast cancer as the older
traditional surgical methods."
Click here for detailed descriptions of different breast biopsy
methods.
- Nearly 70% of women surveyed wished they
had been "comfortable enough to ask the doctor more questions" and wanted
printed materials, a video, or to talk with a woman who had already gone through the
biopsy.
- 25% of women surveyed said they had not
been fully informed about the specifics of their procedure, including the type of biopsy
they would have, the length of time it would take, or the amount of pain and scarring to
expect.
- 55% surveyed said they wish they had
more time to talk with their doctors before the biopsy was performed.
- More than 90% of the women surveyed said
they experienced anxiety, stress, and fear about the biopsy experience and the cancer it
might reveal. More than 20% said these emotions may have prevented them from asking their
physicians questions.
Positive results of the NABCO survey:
- 76% of the women surveyed had been told
of the eight-in-ten odds that their biopsy would return a benign (not cancerous) result.
- More than half of women (56%) said their
breast abnormality was first discovered during a routine mammogram,
indicating that many women are getting their recommended annual screening exams.
Abnormalities discovered by routine screening mammography are more likely to be suitable
for percutaneous needle biopsy. Those abnormalities discovered through physical breast
exam are usually much larger and may not be suitable for percutaneous needle biopsy.
Over one million breast biopsies are
now performed annually in the United States: approximately 800,000 surgical biopsies and
200,000 minimally invasive percutaneous biopsies. There are approximately 2,000 facilities
in the US that perform stereotactic, minimally invasive breast biopsy. Of these, about 300
are accredited by the American College of Radiology (ACR). The ACR's voluntary mammography
accreditation program established quality standards that were the basis for FDA
regulations under the Mammography Quality Standards Act (MQSA)
in 1994. Similarly, voluntary accreditation by the ACR and the American College of
Surgeons are currently the only quality measures available to those seeking an expert
image-guided biopsy. Regulation of stereotactic breast biopsy under MQSA is currently
being considered by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Updated: May 4, 2008
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