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There are several types of breast biopsy. The choice of which type is suitable for an individual depends on various factors. Some of these include:
The various types of breast biopsy include:
In this procedure the pathologist or the doctor uses a very thin needle (thinner than ones used for blood tests) attached to a syringe to withdraw a small amount of tissue from the suspicious area. The tissue is placed over a glass slide, stained with special dyes and examined under the microscope.
The area of the biopsy is first numbed with a local anesthetic injection. For the procedure the doctor locates the lump by palpating it or feeling it by hand. In case the lump is not felt by hand the doctor may use imaging guidance of an ultrasound and watch the needle on a screen as it moves toward and into the mass.
Another method is to use a stereotactic needle biopsy to guide the needle. In this the computers can map the exact location of the mass using mammograms taken from 2 angles. This helps in the biopsy.
An FNAC may sometimes miss cancer if the needle does not get a tissue sample from the area of cancer cells. This may require a second FNAC or a different type of biopsy.
This is similar to FNAC. In this the needle is slightly larger and hollow. It is used to withdraw small cylinders (or cores) of tissue from the abnormal area in the breast. This is also performed under local anesthesia.
The needle is put in 3 to 6 times to get the samples, or cores. Imaging guidance may be used for this type of biopsy as well. A stereotactic core needle biopsy may also be performed under imaging guidance.
This is done by a Vacuum Assisted Device. A hollow probe is put in through a cut over the lump. A cylinder of tissue is then pulled into the probe through a hole in its side, and a rotating knife inside the probe cuts the tissue sample from the rest of the breast.
If the tumor is diagnosed using FNAC, treatment is planned accordingly. In some cases where diagnosis is not confirmed a surgical biopsy may be recommended. For this the lump may be totally or partially excised. This may also be called an open biopsy.
Open biopsies are of two types - incisional biopsies and excisional biopsies. When an entire lump is removed, the procedure is called an ''excisional biopsy''. When only a sample of tissue is removed with preservation of the histological architecture of the tissue’s cells, the procedure is called an ''incisional biopsy''.
This is biopsy of a sentinel lymph node. A sentinel lymph node is the first draining axillary lymph node from the breast. If tumor cells are detected in this node, the status of the spread of the cancer from the breast can be predicted.