Overview
The standard method for localizing non-palpable breast cancer is currently clip localization, its positive margin rate still remains around 20-50%. This study aims to compare the accuracy and efficacy of single vs. combined breast tissue markers in localizing non-palpable breast cancer.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- female patients, age≥18 year
- A score of ≥ 2 on the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group scale
- Patients pathologically diagnosed with breast cancer by core-needle biopsy, received neoadjuvant treatment and the lesion becomes non-palpable before enrollment.
- Patients are willing to undergo breast conserving surgery and have no contraindications to breast conserving surgery
Exclusion Criteria:
- Inflammatory breast cancer or Paget's disease
- Breast deformities and other conditions that impact breast conservation success rate
- Patients with contraindications to breast-conserving surgery, as well as those with systemic diseases, mental disorders, or other subjective reasons that may affect their ability to participate in the trial. Patients with severe bleeding disorders or coagulation disorders were also excluded.
- Pregnancy or lactation
- Patients with hook-wire, radioactive 125I seed or other localization techniques in the breast cancer lesions before enrollment
- Patients with stage IV diseases or unresectable lesions in either breast
- Patients combined with other diseases that may affect survival
- Patients with multicentric breast cancer lesions or lesions > 5 cm in diameter on imaging examinations
- Patients who have previously undergone radical mastectomy for ipsilateral breast cancer or chest wall radiotherapy
- Patients with history of ipsilateral breast cancer radical mastectomy or chest wall radiotherapy