AN EVALUATION OF RADIONUCLIDE BONE SCANNING AND LIVER ULTRASONOGRAPHY FOR STAGING BREAST CANCER

1992 
The use of nuclear bone scanning and liver ultrasonography to stage breast cancer is an established practice in many hospitals. A 3 year prospective study was undertaken to assess the usefulness of these two investigations. Three hundred and fifty-eight patients were analysed: 133 had stage 1 disease, 188 were stage 11 and 37 were stage III. Bone scans were performed on 339 (94.7%) patients; 302 had stage I or stage II disease: and 37 were stage III. Bone scans were positive for metastases in only 0.9% of stage I and II patients but were positive in 16.2% of patients with stage III disease. None of the 309 (96.2%) stage I or stage II patients who had an ultrasound scan had any liver metastases detected whereas positive scans were obtained in 5.4% of stage III patients. It can be concluded that the incidence of demonstrable bone or liver metastases in stage I and stage II breast cancer patients is so low that the use of routine scanning can be abandoned.
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