Ductal lavage for detection of cellular atypia in women at high risk for breast cancer

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Abstract

Background: Breast cancer originates in breast epithelium and is associated with progressive molecular and morphologic changes. Women with atypical breast ductal epithelial cells have an increased relative risk of breast cancer. In this study, ductal lavage, a new procedure for collecting ductal cells with a microcatheter, was compared with nipple aspiration with regard to safety, tolerability, and the ability to detect abnormal breast epithelial cells. Methods: Women at high risk for breast cancer who had nonsuspicious mammograms and clinical breast examinations underwent nipple aspiration followed by lavage of fluid-yielding ducts. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results: The 507 women enrolled included 291 (57%) with a history of breast cancer and 199 (39%) with a 5-year Gail risk for breast cancer of 1.7% or more. Nipple aspirate fluid (NAF) samples were evaluated cytologically for 417 women, and ductal lavage samples were evaluated for 383 women. Adequate samples for diagnosis were collected from 111 (27%) and 299 (78%) women, respectively. A median of 13 500 epithelial cells per duct (range, 43-492 000 cells) was collected by ductal lavage compared with a median of 120 epithelial cells per breast (range, 10-74 300) collected by nipple aspiration. For ductal lavage, 92 (24%) subjects had abnormal cells that were mildly (17%) or markedly (6%) atypical or malignant (<1%). For NAF, corresponding percentages were 6%, 3%, and fewer than 1%. Ductal lavage detected abnormal intraductal breast cells 3.2 times more often than nipple aspiration (79 versus 25 breasts; McNemar's test, P

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Dooley, W. C., Ljung, B. M., Veronesi, U., Cazzaniga, M., Elledge, R. M., O’Shaughnessy, J. A., … King, E. B. (2001). Ductal lavage for detection of cellular atypia in women at high risk for breast cancer. Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 93(21), 1624–1632. https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/93.21.1624

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