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Benign vascular lesions of the breast diagnosed by core needle biopsy do not require excision
Author(s) -
Sebastiano Christopher,
Gennaro Lucas,
Brogi Edi,
Morris Elizabeth,
Bowser Zenica L,
Antonescu Cristina R,
Pareja Fresia,
Brennan Sandra,
Murray Melissa P
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
histopathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.626
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1365-2559
pISSN - 0309-0167
DOI - 10.1111/his.13291
Subject(s) - medicine , atypia , biopsy , lesion , radiology , pathological , radiological weapon , surgery , pathology
Aims Surgical excision of all benign vascular lesions of the breast identified by core needle biopsy has been recommended in the past to rule out a more serious lesion. In this study we investigated the clinical, radiological and pathological findings in patients diagnosed with a benign vascular lesion at our institution to assess whether excision may be spared for lesions without atypia. Methods and results We searched the electronic medical record for patients with a vascular lesion of the breast diagnosed between 2000 and 2015. The study population consisted of 84 patients, 83 females and one male. The index diagnoses included 76 benign vascular lesions, five vascular lesions with cytological atypia and three angiosarcomas. A radiologist reviewed all pre‐ and post‐biopsy imaging studies; all cases had concordant radiological and pathological findings. Based on radiological and histological correlation, the vascular lesion accounted for the radiological target in 40 (48%) cases and was deemed an incidental finding in 44 (52%). Seven of 32 (22%) targeted and 10 of 44 (23%) incidental benign vascular lesions underwent surgical excision; there were no upgrades at excision. No recurrences or clinical events were observed in patients with a targeted or incidental benign vascular lesion with a median follow‐up of 39 months and 40.6 months, respectively. Conclusion Our data suggest that benign vascular lesions diagnosed on core biopsy with concordant radiological and pathological findings do not warrant surgical excision.

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