J Korean Surg Soc.
1998 Dec;55(Suppl):944-950.
A Clinical Analysis of the Breast Masses by Biopsy
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of General Surgery, Kangnam General Hospital.
- 2Department of Surgery, Ewha Womans University, College of Medicine.
Abstract
- BACKGROUND
: A discussion of the chronologic trends of operative indications of breast masses for proper management of breast masses is desirable.
METHODS
: A retrospective analysis of 882 patients with breast masses who underwent operations at
Kangnam General Hospital from January 1986 to December 1997 was done. All the lesions were
classified according to for age, size of the mass, and the pathologic result. Concurrently, the distributions
of the different masses were retrospectively analyzed for each one-year time period.
RESULTS
: The most prevalent age group was the third decade (28.6%) followed by the fourth decade
(25.3%) and the fifth decade (24.4%). The most common lesion was fibroadenoma (38.7%), followed
by mammary dysplasia (22.6%) and malignancy (18.3%). In fibroadenoma, the most common pathologic
type was intracanalicular (34.9%), and the juvenile type occurred in significantly younger patients
compared to other types (19.2 vs 29.2 years of age). In mammary dysplasia, the most common pathologic
type was fibrous (74.4%), and the epithelial hyperplasia and adenosis types were occurred in older patients
compared to the other types (39.1 and 41.0 vs 33.5 and 35.4 years of age). As the chronologically
changing pattern of the pathologic types, the number of mammary dysplasia had a decreasing tendency
and fibroadenoma had a relatively increasing one, and the reason may be the effect of fine-needle
aspiration cytology.
CONCLUSIONS
: The result of this study shows that the distribution of the disease in terms of age and
frequency is almost the same as that of other reported results. The trend of the disease types in terms
of the time period shows that the operation rate for fibroadenomas is increasing while the rate for
mammary dysplasia is decreasing. This tendency might come from the decreasing use of surgical biopsy
for mammary dysplasia.