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Clin Imaging ; 104: 110017, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37979400

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Bleeding is a well-known risk of percutaneous breast biopsy, frequently controlled with manual pressure. However, significant bleeding complications may require further evaluation or intervention. Our objectives were to assess the rate, type, and periprocedural management of significant bleeding following percutaneous breast biopsy and to evaluate the success of any interventions. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed percutaneous breast biopsies at our institution over a 10-year period with documented post-biopsy bleeding complications in radiology reports. Patients were included if bleeding required intervention (interventional radiology [IR], surgery, or other), imaging follow-up, or clinical evaluation for symptoms. Additional data included patient demographics, anticoagulation, history of bleeding diathesis, biopsy details, bleeding symptoms, histopathology, and intervention details, if applicable. RESULTS: Of 5820 unique patients who underwent percutaneous biopsy, 66 patients (66/5820; 1.1%) comprising 71 biopsy cases met inclusion for clinically significant bleeding with 5/71(7.0%) requiring surgery, 9/71(12.7%) requiring IR intervention, and 57/71(80.3%) requiring lower-acuity intervention including prolonged observation (5/57;7.0%), overnight admission (4/57;5.6%), aspiration (4/57;5.6%), lidocaine and suture (2/57;2.8%), primary care visit (7/57;10.0%), blood transfusion (1/57;1.4%), emergency room visit (6/57;8.5%), surgery consult (8/57;11.3%), IR consult (2/57;2.8%), and follow-up imaging (22/57;31.0%). Most patients requiring intervention by surgery or IR had acute signs of bleeding immediately after biopsy while most patients with delayed signs of bleeding required lower-acuity interventions. CONCLUSION: Clinically significant bleeding is extremely rare after percutaneous breast biopsy and is most often managed non-surgically. Developing an institutional algorithm for management of bleeding complications that consults IR before surgery may help decrease the number of patients managed surgically.


Subject(s)
Blood Coagulation Disorders , Hemorrhage , Humans , Retrospective Studies , Biopsy, Needle/adverse effects , Biopsy/adverse effects , Hemorrhage/epidemiology , Hemorrhage/etiology , Hemorrhage/therapy , Blood Coagulation Disorders/complications
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