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Breast J ; 27(6): 529-536, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33855763

ABSTRACT

The breast surgical community has faced huge challenges due to close working relationships with radiologists who are in short supply. Breast lesion localization is moving away from the traditional wire technique, which requires an on-site radiologist to support theater scheduling. In North Wales, the introduction of Magseed for impalpable breast lesion localization has facilitated theater scheduling in the absence of same day radiology presence. We audited our first 200 Magseed cases to assess the safety and efficacy of the technique, the ease of use, and patient experience. Data were entered prospectively into an excel data base relating to Magseed cases. Data collected included demographics, pre and postoperative lesion size, histology, margin positivity, and re-excision rates. Data were submitted in real time by the radiologist performing Magseed insertion to ascertain degree of difficulty. A PROMS questionnaire was designed and sent to patients undergoing Magseed vs wire localizations. Two hundred patients underwent Magseed-guided wide local excision between May 2018 and January 2020 across 2 district general hospital sites in North Wales. Histology: 69% IDC, 20% ILC, and 11% others. Mean preoperative size 12.3 mm, postoperative size 19 mm. Re-excision rate 15%. Re-excision for DCIS was significantly more likely than for invasive disease (p < 0.0001). A significant difference was also observed between radiological mean preoperative tumor size estimate and actual histological tumor size in patients undergoing margin re-excision (p = 0.000019). Wire-guided re-excision rate was 21% in the same unit. PROMs found the procedure well tolerated by patients. Surgeons and radiologists reported Magseed to be user-friendly with minimal learning curve. Magseed use for impalpable breast lesion localization is safe, user friendly, and well tolerated by patients. It produces favorable re-excision rates when compared to published figures for wire-guided excision. The presence of DCIS and preoperative radiological size underestimation was associated with margin re-excision.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms , Breast Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Breast Neoplasms/surgery , Female , Humans , Magnetic Phenomena , Margins of Excision , Mastectomy, Segmental , Wales
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