Microcalcification of Tumor is a Predictor of Response to Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Invasive Breast Carcinoma

[ABSTRACT] [Background] In recent years, neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) is often performed for patients with unresectable breast carcinoma or without indication of breast conserving therapy. However, it is currently difficult to predict response to NAC with diagnostic imaging of breast carcinoma. In...

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Published in:YONAGO ACTA MEDICA Vol. 58; no. 2; pp. 85 - 88
Main Authors: Murata, Aya, Sannomiya, Naoko, Miyamoto, Naoki, Ueda, Naoyuki, Kamida, Akira, Koyanagi, Yuki, Nagira, Haruki, Matsuda, Eriko, Hashimoto, Yuki, Sato, Kengo, Hirooka, Yumi, Hosoya, Keiko, Takagi, Yuzo, Tanaka, Yuko, Araki, Kunio, Ishiguro, Kiyosuke, Hirooka, Yasuaki
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Japan Tottori University Faculty of Medicine 01-06-2015
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Summary:[ABSTRACT] [Background] In recent years, neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) is often performed for patients with unresectable breast carcinoma or without indication of breast conserving therapy. However, it is currently difficult to predict response to NAC with diagnostic imaging of breast carcinoma. In this study, we investigated imaging findings that could serve as a predictor of the response to NAC for patients with invasive breast carcinoma. [Methods] Twenty-six patients with invasive breast carcinoma who received NAC at the Division of Breast and Endocrine Surgery of Tottori University Hospital between January 2010 and May 2014 were retrospectively investigated. Their imaging findings from mammograms and ultrasonograms were reviewed. The association between findings on mammograms and ultrasonograms captured before NAC and response to treatment after NAC was examined. [Results] Of the 26 patients with invasive breast carcinoma, 19 (73%) responded well to treatment and 7 (27%) did not. Most notably, all 10 patients who had microcalcifications on mammogram responded well to treatment (53% of responders), and all patients who did not respond to treatment had no microcalcifications (P<0.05). Of these 10 patients, 9 (90%) had microcalcifications of comedo type and one (10%) had non comedo type. As a distribution, 8 of the 10 (80%) had a clustered type of microcalcifications and the remaining 2 (20%) had a segmental type of them. [Conclusion] Microcalcifications of tumor observed in mammogram (particularly comedo type) could be a predictor of response to NAC for patients with invasive breast carcinoma.
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ISSN:0513-5710
1346-8049