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Browsing by Subject "Lumpectomy"

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    Adenomyoepithelioma of the Breast in the Setting of Prior Contralateral Breast Malignancy
    (Springer Nature, 2023-05-18) Dauterman, Leah C.; Lentsch, Kristen; Fan, Betty; Medicine, School of Medicine
    An 81-year-old female patient underwent a screening mammogram one year after completing treatment for right-sided estrogen receptor (ER)/progesterone receptor (PR)-negative ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). A new 1-cm mass was noted in the contralateral breast. Ultrasound and percutaneous core needle biopsy results were suggestive of an atypical papillary lesion. An excisional biopsy was performed, and the final pathology was consistent with a benign adenomyoepithelioma (AME). Surgical resection was considered her definitive treatment. AME of the breast is a rare clinical entity, with only a handful of case reports and case series available. In this case report, we review common clinical and radiologic presentations, methods of diagnosis, and recommendations for management based on current literature. The presence of an AME in the background of a previous or synchronous breast malignancy occurs in a very small percentage of cases. On review of available literature, we identified other cases with a past or current history of breast malignancy.
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    A fiber optoacoustic guide with augmented reality for precision breast-conserving surgery
    (Springer Nature, 2018-05-18) Lan, Lu; Xia, Yan; Li, Rui; Liu, Kaiming; Mai, Jieying; Medley, Jennifer Anne; Obeng-Gyasi, Samilia; Han, Linda K.; Wang, Pu; Cheng, Ji-Xin; Radiology and Imaging Sciences, School of Medicine
    Lumpectomy, also called breast-conserving surgery, has become the standard surgical treatment for early-stage breast cancer. However, accurately locating the tumor during a lumpectomy, especially when the lesion is small and nonpalpable, is a challenge. Such difficulty can lead to either incomplete tumor removal or prolonged surgical time, which result in high re-operation rates (~25%) and increased surgical costs. Here, we report a fiber optoacoustic guide (FOG) with augmented reality (AR) for sub-millimeter tumor localization and intuitive surgical guidance with minimal interference. The FOG is preoperatively implanted in the tumor. Under external pulsed light excitation, the FOG omnidirectionally broadcasts acoustic waves through the optoacoustic effect by a specially designed nano-composite layer at its tip. By capturing the acoustic wave, three ultrasound sensors on the breast skin triangulate the FOG tip's position with 0.25-mm accuracy. An AR system with a tablet measures the coordinates of the ultrasound sensors and transforms the FOG tip's position into visual feedback with <1-mm accuracy, thus aiding surgeons in directly visualizing the tumor location and performing fast and accurate tumor removal. We further show the use of a head-mounted display to visualize the same information in the surgeons' first-person view and achieve hands-free guidance. Towards clinical application, a surgeon successfully deployed the FOG to excise a "pseudo tumor" in a female human cadaver. With the high-accuracy tumor localization by FOG and the intuitive surgical guidance by AR, the surgeon performed accurate and fast tumor removal, which will significantly reduce re-operation rates and shorten the surgery time.
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    Patient characteristics and clinical factors affecting lumpectomy cavity volume: implications for partial breast irradiation
    (Frontiers Media, 2023-05-23) Le, Amy; Achiko, Flora Amy; Boyd, LaKeisha; Shan, Mu; Zellars, Richard C.; Rhome, Ryan M.; Radiation Oncology, School of Medicine
    Introduction: Partial breast irradiation (PBI) has increased in utilization, with the postoperative lumpectomy cavity and clips used to guide target volumes. The ideal timing to perform computed tomography (CT)-based treatment planning for this technique is unclear. Prior studies have examined change in volume over time from surgery but not the effect of patient characteristics on lumpectomy cavity volume. We sought to investigate patient and clinical factors that may contribute to larger postsurgical lumpectomy cavities and therefore predict for larger PBI volumes. Methods: A total of 351 consecutive women with invasive or in situ breast cancer underwent planning CT after breast-conserving surgery at a single institution during 2019 and 2020. Lumpectomy cavities were contoured, and volume was retrospectively computed using the treatment planning system. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to evaluate the associations between lumpectomy cavity volume and patient and clinical factors. Results: Median age was 61.0 years (range, 30-91), 23.9% of patients were Black people, 52.1% had hypertension, the median body mass index (BMI) was 30.4 kg/m², 11.4% received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, 32.5% were treated prone, mean interval from surgery to CT simulation was 54.1 days ± 45.9, and mean lumpectomy cavity volume was 42.2 cm3 ± 52.0. Longer interval from surgery was significantly associated with smaller lumpectomy cavity volume on univariate analysis, p = 0.048. Race, hypertension, BMI, the receipt of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and prone position remained significant on multivariate analysis (p < 0.05 for all). Prone position vs. supine, higher BMI, the receipt of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the presence of hypertension, and race (Black people vs. White people) were associated with larger mean lumpectomy cavity volume. Discussion: These data may be used to select patients for which longer time to simulation may result in smaller lumpectomy cavity volumes and therefore smaller PBI target volumes. Racial disparity in cavity size is not explained by known confounders and may reflect unmeasured systemic determinants of health. Larger datasets and prospective evaluation would be ideal to confirm these hypotheses.
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