final abstract

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Evaluation of Surgical Re- excision Rates with Bioptics Biovision Imaging Sarah De Los Santos BA, Anita Sambamurty BS, Anita P. McSwain MD MPH FACS, Christine B. Teal MD FACS

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Page 1: Final Abstract

Evaluation of Surgical Re-excision Rates with Bioptics Biovision Imaging

Sarah De Los Santos BA, Anita Sambamurty BS,

Anita P. McSwain MD MPH FACS, Christine B. Teal MD FACS

Page 2: Final Abstract

Purpose

To assess the efficacy of examining specimen margins with Bioptics Biovision imaging to potentially reduce re-excisions for patients undergoing breast

surgical excision by wire localization.

Page 3: Final Abstract

Introduction• The diagnosis of breast cancer is generally made by

ultrasound or sterotactic guided core needle biopsy.

• When a patient is not amenable to needle biopsy or when pathology shows an abnormal lesion that is not palpable, surgical excision with wire localization is necessary.

• Wire localization is performed in the radiology suite by ultrasound or mammographic guidance.

Page 4: Final Abstract

Surgical Excision

Page 5: Final Abstract

Faxitron Bioptics Biovision

Page 6: Final Abstract

Intaoperative Specimen Verification

• Bioptics Biovision versus Traditional Analog Xray

• Immediate intraoperative digital imaging

• Higher Quality Images

• Portable

• Decreased operating time

Page 7: Final Abstract

Bioptics BioVision Imaging vs Analog XRay

• 35 patients undergoing excisional biopsies by wire localization

• Bioptics BioVision required less time for specimen radiography

Imaging Modality Range of Time Average Time

Bioptics Biovision 1.3 – 4.0 min 1.9 min

Analogy XRay 12.6 – 19.3 min 15.8 min

Presented at the 13th Annual Meeting of the American Association Society of Breast Surgeons

Page 8: Final Abstract

Factors Associated with Re-Excision• 351 patients with Early Stage Breast Cancer that were

treated with breast conservation surgery

• 118 patients required RE for close surgical margins• DCIS was present in 77 (65%) of the involved margins

• 211 patients had surgical excision requiring wire localization• 76 patients (36%) of the 211 required re-excision due to close

margins• 39 of the 140 patients (28%) who had palpable tumors required a

secondary re-excision

Printed in The American Surgeon, Vol 76, March 2010

Page 9: Final Abstract

Methods

Page 10: Final Abstract

MethodsSuperior

Inferior

MedialLateral

Does NOT assessAnteriorPosterior

Page 11: Final Abstract

Methods

• Retrospective Chart Review of 127 Breast Excisions by Wire Localization

Variables studiedRe-excision Rates & Pre-operative Diagnosis

• Breast Cancer• Other: Atypia, Papilloma, not amenable to needle biopsy

Positive Margins

• Anterior and Posterior Margins• All other Margins

Additional Margins taken during surgery

• Positive Margins with cancer• Additional Re-excision

Page 12: Final Abstract

Results: Re-Excision Rates

All Cases Cancer Diagnoses Atypia, Papillomas or Unknown Diagnosis

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

Nu

mb

er o

f P

atie

nts

1037

48

Total: 127

Total: 109

Total: 18

38% 34% 55%

Our previous Re-excision rate – 36%

Page 13: Final Abstract

Positive Margins requiring Re-excision

Anterior Posterior Anterior and Posterior

Other Margins0

5

10

15

20

25

Nu

mb

er o

f P

atie

nts

110 17

Sup = 4

28 of the 48 (58%) patients requiring re-excision had inadequate anterior or posterior margins

21% 35% 2% 42%

Inf = 4

Med = 7

Lat = 520

Page 14: Final Abstract

Additional Margins• 68 additional margins were excised in 51 patients after

intraoperative specimen verification

• 15 of the 68 additional margins showed carcinoma• 10 of the 15 (67%) showed DCIS

• 30 (59%) patients did not require re-excision; 21 (41%) had positive margins.

Page 15: Final Abstract

Additional Margins• 3 of the 68 (14%) additional margins excised required

another re-excision of the same margin

• 12 of the 21 (57%) patients requiring re-excision were due to inadequate anterior or posterior margins

Page 16: Final Abstract

Conclusions• Intraoperative digital mammography is an excellent

addition to a surgeon’s armamentarium, with a decrease in operative time.

• Additional margins can be removed intraoperatively based on immediate imaging.

• Reduced secondary re-excision rates in breast cancer patients with surgical excision and wire localization

• Limited imaging for the anterior and posterior margins

Page 17: Final Abstract

Possible Improvements• Faxitron Bioptics Wedge

• Orthogonal views

• New techniques are needed to visualize the anterior and posterior margins to further reduce re-excision rates