Skip to main content
Annals of The Royal College of Surgeons of England logoLink to Annals of The Royal College of Surgeons of England
. 2005 Mar;87(2):92–95. doi: 10.1308/1478708051595

Radioguided occult lesion localisation (ROLL) is available in the UK for impalpable breast lesions.

Riccardo A Audisio 1, Rana Nadeem 1, Olga Harris 1, Sean Desmond 1, Rani Thind 1, Leena S Chagla 1
PMCID: PMC1963871  PMID: 15826415

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: To test the feasibility and reliability of ROLL in a district general hospital (DGH) dealing with screening detected breast lesions. PATIENTS AND METHODS: [(99m) Tc]-labelled colloidal human serum albumin was injected in the core of the breast lesion under ultrasound or stereotactic guidance 2-4 h prior to surgery. At operation, the radioactivity is localised using a gamma-probe. This allows optimal placement of the skin incision and subsequent WLE of the abnormal area. RESULTS: ROLL was utilised on 36 patients (median age, 61 years; range, 43-75 years); of these, 33 B5 lesions had a therapeutic one-step procedure (lumpectomy and axillary dissection) and 3 B4 patients had the lesion excised for diagnostic purposes. Localisation lasted a median of 8 min (range, 5-15 min), ROLL-guided wide tumour excision lasted 20 min (range, 15-30 min), and median postoperative hospital stay was 2 days (range, 1-3 days). Median cancer diameter was 12 mm (range, 6-40 mm). Margins were clear in 29 patients, while 7 patients with DCIS had involved margins. Median minimal clearance was 5 mm (range, < 1-10 mm). Patients had either excellent (24/36) or good (12/36) cosmetic results. CONCLUSIONS: ROLL successfully localised all lesions; this technique can be implemented in any DGH with a Nuclear Medicine Department. The learning curve is short, cost effectiveness is proven, and cosmetic results are highly rewarding. ROLL could rapidly become the standard localisation technique in the UK.

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (89.9 KB).


Articles from Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England are provided here courtesy of The Royal College of Surgeons of England

RESOURCES