Minimally Invasive Breast Biopsies [electronic resource] /edited by Renzo Brun del Re.
by Brun del Re, Renzo [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
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QD380-388 Block Copolymers II | QD380-388 Interphases and Mesophases in Polymer Crystallization III | QB1-991 High Resolution Infrared Spectroscopy in Astronomy | RC254-282 Minimally Invasive Breast Biopsies | QA76.7-76.73 Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing | Q334-342 Socionics | QA71-90 Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equations on Parallel Computers |
Documentation and Correlation of Senologic Findings -- Comparison of Large-Core Vacuum-Assisted Breast Biopsy and Excision Systems -- Sonographically Guided Vacuum-Assisted Breast Biopsy Using Handheld Mammotome -- The Vacora Biopsy System -- Available Stereotactic Systems for Breast Biopsy -- MRI-Guided Minimally Invasive Breast Procedures -- Ductoscopy of Intraductal Neoplasia of the Breast -- Pathology of Breast Tissue Obtained in Minimally Invasive Biopsy Procedures -- Limitations of Minimally Invasive Breast Biopsy -- Advances in Breast Imaging: A Dilemma or Progress? -- Cost–Benefit Analyses -- Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Recent Data.
Modern imaging methods have made it possible to detect breast cancer at an earlier stage than in the past. Nevertheless, when screening is performed regularly over a 10-year period, 20% of examined women will present a suspicious finding that subsequently proves to be benign. Accordingly, beyond cancer detection an important goal is the identification of benign lesions in a manner that is reliable, tissue sparing, patient friendly, and cost-effective. More than 70% of breast biopsies can now be performed using minimally invasive procedures that meet these criteria. Against this background, it can be concluded that a mammography screening programme without the possibility of minimally invasive biopsies is neither ethically nor economically justifiable. This book examines in detail the diverse minimally invasive diagnostic techniques that may be employed when imaging yields suspicious findings. These include vacuum-assisted minimally invasive breast biopsy systems (ATEC, EnCor, Intact, Mammotome and Vacora), stereotactic systems, MRI-guided procedures, and ductoscopy. Further chapters are devoted to the pathology of the breast tissue obtained using these procedures, their limitations, the implications of recent advances in breast imaging, and the results of cost-benefit analyses. The closing chapter provides a systematic review and meta-analysis of recent data.
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