open access

Vol 90, No 2 (2019)
Review paper
Published online: 2019-02-28
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Intraductal papilloma of the breast — management

Diana Hodorowicz-Zaniewska12, Joanna Szpor23, Pawel Basta24
·
Pubmed: 30860277
·
Ginekol Pol 2019;90(2):100-103.
Affiliations
  1. 1st Chair of General Surgery, Department of General, Oncological and Gastroenterological Surgery, Jagiellonian University Medical College, Cracow, Poland
  2. University Center for Breast Diseases, University Hospital in Cracow, Poland
  3. Chair of of Pathomorphology, Jagiellonian University Medical College, Cracow, Poland
  4. Chair of Gynaecology and Obstetrics, Department of Gynaecology and Oncology, Jagiellonian University Medical College, Cracow, Poland

open access

Vol 90, No 2 (2019)
REVIEW PAPERS Gynecology
Published online: 2019-02-28

Abstract

In light of the growing availability of ultrasound testing and invasive diagnostic methods of the breast in everyday gyneco- logic practice, lesions of uncertain malignant potential, classified histologically as B3, have become a significant health issue. Intraductal papillomas (IPs) are the most common pathology in that group of lesions. Despite their benign histologic appearance, IPs may accompany malignant growths and the diagnosis made on the basis of biopsy material carries the risk of breast cancer (BC) underestimation. The article presents a review of the available literature on the management of patients diagnosed with intraductal papilloma at a standard core needle biopsy or vacuum-assisted core needle biopsy. The management is not uniform and depends not only on the verification technique or the accompanying pathological growths, but also on the result of clinical-pathological correlations. As it turns out, open surgical biopsy should not necessarily be recommended to every affected woman, and a growing number of sources have recently suggested that a control program would be sufficient in many cases. Thus, it is vital for gynecologists to be able to differentiate between those women who may be included in the annual ultrasound control program and those who require further surgical management. 

Abstract

In light of the growing availability of ultrasound testing and invasive diagnostic methods of the breast in everyday gyneco- logic practice, lesions of uncertain malignant potential, classified histologically as B3, have become a significant health issue. Intraductal papillomas (IPs) are the most common pathology in that group of lesions. Despite their benign histologic appearance, IPs may accompany malignant growths and the diagnosis made on the basis of biopsy material carries the risk of breast cancer (BC) underestimation. The article presents a review of the available literature on the management of patients diagnosed with intraductal papilloma at a standard core needle biopsy or vacuum-assisted core needle biopsy. The management is not uniform and depends not only on the verification technique or the accompanying pathological growths, but also on the result of clinical-pathological correlations. As it turns out, open surgical biopsy should not necessarily be recommended to every affected woman, and a growing number of sources have recently suggested that a control program would be sufficient in many cases. Thus, it is vital for gynecologists to be able to differentiate between those women who may be included in the annual ultrasound control program and those who require further surgical management. 

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Keywords

intraductal papilloma; B3 breast lesions; core needle biopsy; vacuum-assisted core needle biopsy; underestimation; breast cancer

About this article
Title

Intraductal papilloma of the breast — management

Journal

Ginekologia Polska

Issue

Vol 90, No 2 (2019)

Article type

Review paper

Pages

100-103

Published online

2019-02-28

Page views

5654

Article views/downloads

4320

DOI

10.5603/GP.2019.0017

Pubmed

30860277

Bibliographic record

Ginekol Pol 2019;90(2):100-103.

Keywords

intraductal papilloma
B3 breast lesions
core needle biopsy
vacuum-assisted core needle biopsy
underestimation
breast cancer

Authors

Diana Hodorowicz-Zaniewska
Joanna Szpor
Pawel Basta

References (25)
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