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. 2018 Nov 30;174(2):279–296. doi: 10.1007/s10549-018-05071-1

Second International Consensus Conference on lesions of uncertain malignant potential in the breast (B3 lesions)

Christoph J Rageth 1,18,, Elizabeth A M O’Flynn 2, Katja Pinker 3, Rahel A Kubik-Huch 4, Alexander Mundinger 5, Thomas Decker 6, Christoph Tausch 7, Florian Dammann 8, Pascal A Baltzer 9, Eva Maria Fallenberg 10, Maria P Foschini 11, Sophie Dellas 12, Michael Knauer 13, Caroline Malhaire 14, Martin Sonnenschein 15, Andreas Boos 16, Elisabeth Morris 3, Zsuzsanna Varga 17
PMCID: PMC6538569  PMID: 30506111

Abstract

Purpose

The second International Consensus Conference on B3 lesions was held in Zurich, Switzerland, in March 2018, organized by the International Breast Ultrasound School to re-evaluate the consensus recommendations.

Methods

This study (1) evaluated how management recommendations of the first Zurich Consensus Conference of 2016 on B3 lesions had influenced daily practice and (2) reviewed current literature towards recommendations to biopsy.

Results

In 2018, the consensus recommendations for management of B3 lesions remained almost unchanged: For flat epithelial atypia (FEA), classical lobular neoplasia (LN), papillary lesions (PL) and radial scars (RS) diagnosed on core-needle biopsy (CNB) or vacuum-assisted biopsy (VAB), excision by VAB in preference to open surgery, and for atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) and phyllodes tumors (PT) diagnosed at VAB or CNB, first-line open surgical excision (OE) with follow-up surveillance imaging for 5 years. Analyzing the Database of the Swiss Minimally Invasive Breast Biopsies (MIBB) with more than 30,000 procedures recorded, there was a significant increase in recommending more frequent surveillance of LN [65% in 2018 vs. 51% in 2016 (p = 0.004)], FEA (72% in 2018 vs. 62% in 2016 (p = 0.005)), and PL [(76% in 2018 vs. 70% in 2016 (p = 0.04)] diagnosed on VAB. A trend to more frequent surveillance was also noted also for RS [77% in 2018 vs. 67% in 2016 (p = 0.07)].

Conclusions

Minimally invasive management of B3 lesions (except ADH and PT) with VAB continues to be appropriate as an alternative to first-line OE in most cases, but with more frequent surveillance, especially for LN.

Keywords: B3 lesions, Vacuum-assisted biopsy, Consensus, Breast, Uncertain malignant potential, Breast surgery

Introduction

Lesions of uncertain malignant potential in the breast (B3 lesions) represent a heterogeneous group of abnormalities with an overall risk for malignancy of 9.9%–35.1% after total resection [1]. Historically open surgical excision has been recommended for all B3 lesions; however, over the last decade there has been a trend towards minimally invasive breast biopsy or percutaneous excision using a vacuum-assisted device where larger volumes of tissue can be removed compared to core biopsy, equivalent to a small-wide local excision while retaining the same diagnostic accuracy as open surgery [2], but with the obvious benefits of saving the patient a surgical procedure, and cost. Underestimates of malignancy in excised B3 lesions range up to 35% and are associated primarily with increasing size of the lesion and the presence of atypia rather than the nature of the mammographic abnormality (e.g., calcification vs. mass or architectural distortion) [3]. Several studies also indicate that B3 lesions are predominantly upgraded to ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and low-grade invasive tumors [1, 36].

The evidence base for the outcome and behavior of B3 lesions in the literature is accruing. Management and practice vary greatly from country to country, although there is a trend universally for more conservative management as an alternative to open surgery. The 2016 recommendations from the first International Consensus Conference on B3 lesions [7] during the biannual International Breast Ultrasound School (IBUS) course were well accepted by many breast units in different countries. The purpose of the second International Consensus Conference in 2018 was to re-evaluate how recommendations for the management and follow-up surveillance of B3 lesions in the breast had influenced daily practice, review the most recent literature, and investigate the trend towards less open surgery and appropriate surveillance.

Methodology

The second International Consensus Conference on lesions of uncertain malignant potential (B3) was held with international experts as part of the IBUS seminar in March 2018. The meeting in March 2018 had 70 participants with an additional 19 multidisciplinary expert panel members (including all the aforementioned authors) comprising 55% radiologists, and 45% other (including pathologists, surgeons, and gynecologists) with 68% having more than 10 years’ experience in breast imaging. All participants were invited to vote on all recommendations and between 60 and 80 (depending on the question asked) decided to vote.

A new analysis of the Swiss Minimally Invasive Breast Biopsy group (MIBB) Database was performed and presented (histology from 31,574 VABs). The Swiss MIBB group—a subgroup of the Swiss Society of Senology founded in 2007—has collected data for 11 years on each diagnostic or therapeutic VAB performed in Switzerland. To evaluate the impact of the B3 guidelines from the first International Consensus Conference in the management and surveillance of B3 lesions, the data were compared between 2007 and 2015 and 2016–2017 using the Chi-squared test.

Recommendations for management of B3 breast lesions following histological diagnosis were either (i) surveillance (defined as 6 monthly or yearly mammography and/or ultrasound, depending on their imaging findings), (ii) VAB excision, or (iii) open excision.

Following presentations of each B3 lesion in detail with an update of the published literature since the first International Consensus Conference, three questions were asked in turn regarding each of the six B3 lesions [8]:

  1. If a core-needle biopsy (CNB) returned a B3 lesion on histology, should the lesion be excised?

  2. If so, should it be excised using vacuum-assisted biopsy (VAB) or open surgical excision (OE)?

  3. If the VAB returned a B3 lesion on histology and if the lesion was completely removed on imaging, is surveillance acceptable or should a repeat VAB or OE be performed?

A panel discussion followed the voting and consensus recommendations were agreed for the management of each B3 lesion along with decisions on surveillance.

Results

Analysis of the MIBB database

From 2007 until 2017, a total of 31,574 VABs were entered in the database. 6,020 cases (19.1%) showed a B3 lesion (4339 were pure and the other ones were combined B3 lesions).

Table 1 shows the pure B3 lesions together with the final histology in those which had a subsequent open surgery and upgrade rates.

Table 1.

Pure B3 lesions together with the final histology in the cases, which had a subsequent open surgical excision (OE)

Pure B3 histology N With subsequent OE Total upgrade Upgrade to DCIS OR pleomorphic LN Upgrade to IC No upgrade
ADH 943 591 (62.7%) 149 (25.2%) 119 (20.1%) 30 (5.1%) 408 (69.0%)
FEA 994 249 (25.1%) 40 (16.1%) 22 (8.8%) 18 (7.2%) 181 (72.7%)
LN 701 268 (38.2%) 68 (25.4%) 35 (13.1%) 33 (12.3%) 178 (66.4%)
PL 1251 272 (21.7%) 21 (7.7%) 16 (5.9%) 5 (1.8%) 217 (79.8%)
PT 35 4 (11.4%) 0 0 0 4 (100%)
RS 415 75 (18.1%) 6 (8%) 5 (6.7%) 1 (1.3%) 60 (80.0%)

IC invasive cancer

Table 2 shows recommendations made to the patients following VAB. Between 2016 and 2017, surveillance was recommended more frequently for all B3 lesions following VAB, but this was only significant for the following lesions: FEA (72% vs. 61.5%: p = 0.005), LN (64.9% vs. 51%; p = 0.004), and PLs (76% vs. 69.7%; p = 0.04).

Table 2.

Pure B3 lesions with the recommendations after the VAB comparing two time periods 2016–2017 versus 2007–2015

Pure B3 histology N MIBBs OE Recommended Surveillance recommended Recommendation of surveillance difference between 2 time periods in %
2007–2015 2016–2017 2007–2015 2016–2017 2007–2015 2016–2017
ADH 779 160 549 (70.5%) 113 (70.6%) 181 (23.2%) 41 (25.6%) 2.4 (p = 0.52)
FEA 786 207 247 (31.4%) 52 (25.1%) 483 (61.5%) 149 (72%) 10.5* (p = 0.005)
LN 561 131 236 (42.1%) 42 (32.1%) 286 (51%) 85 (64.9%) 13.9* (p = 0.004)
PL 961 288 217 (22.6%) 57 (19.8%) 670 (69.7%) 219 (76%) 6.3* (p = 0.04)
PT 22 13 8 (36%) 3 (23%) 14 (64%) 9 (69%) 5.6 (p = 0.74)
RS 316 99 80 (25.3%) 18 (18.2%) 212 (67.1%) 76 (76.8%) 9.7 (p = 0.07)

*Significant result

OE Open surgical excision

General recommendations of the panel members of the consensus conference

Acceptable rates for the risk of underestimation

In 2016, the panel of the first International Consensus Conference on B3 lesions stated that every B3 lesion should be discussed at a multidisciplinary meeting (MDM). If an MDM makes the decision not to perform open surgery after a diagnosis of a B3 lesion following VAB, it means balancing risks (e.g., having to undergo a surgery under anesthesia which produces a scar) and benefits (e.g., not risking underestimating a lesion, which could be or develop towards an invasive cancer). Therefore in 2018, the question asked was: What is an acceptable underestimation rate for DCIS or IC?

69 participants gave answers for upgrade to IC: < 2.5%: 36 (53%); < 5%: 23 (34%); < 7.5%: 8 (12%); and < 10%: 2 (3%).

68 participants gave answers for upgrade to DCIS: < 5%: 15 (22%); < 10%: 40 (59%); < 15%: 9 (13%); and < 20%: 4 (6%). Therefore, overall underestimation rates for the majority of the panel members were that it should not exceed 5% for IC and 10% for DCIS.

Reasons for recommending an open biopsy instead of surveillance

The panel also discussed which circumstances would argue for performing an open biopsy instead of surveillance only. Discrepancy between histology and imaging was by far the most important factor. For example, if a solid lesion and not only microcalcifications are seen, then histology should correspond to this finding. Further strong arguments for performing a subsequent open biopsy or a repeat VAB were a residual lesion and lesion size. The larger a lesion is, the more likely an open biopsy should be recommended. For an ultrasound-guided VAB, the size should usually not exceed 2.5 cm. Elevated personal risk, the presence of a solid lesion on ultrasound, associated calcifications within the lesion, and absence of calcifications within the lesion were also considered.

Recent literature

Recent manuscripts dealing with B3 lesions were selected for presentation and discussion at the conference. Many of the papers document upgrade rates in following open excision and the risk of developing a cancer during the years following a diagnosis of a B3 lesion. In some of the manuscripts, CNB and VAB were not well differentiated. CNB, often also called microbiopsy, should be used for CNB performed with devices smaller or equal to 14G. The term VAB, often called macrobiopsy, would therefore be reserved for larger needle devices (typically 7 to 11G). Since upgrade rates depend on the amount of tissue, which is available for the pathologist for examination, this distinction is important.

Atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH)

Histological criteria of ADH

ADH is a low-grade neoplastic intraductal proliferation. The histological criteria of ADH include quantitative features of low-grade atypia as monomorphic nuclei with clear membranous borders and secondary intraluminal adenoid architecture. As quantitative features, restriction to one terminal ductal-lobular unit (TDLU) is usually ≤ 2 mm in maximal extension, whereas the histological as immunophenotypical features of an ADH lesion are the same as at low-grade DCIS. Intraductal ADH cell proliferations are negative for high molecular weight cytokeratins and strongly and diffusely positive for estrogen receptors in the same pattern as seem at low-grade DCIS. The differential diagnosis between ADH and DCIS is based on size only. Therefore, a low-grade in situ neoplastic lesion with qualitative features of ADH cannot definitely be separated from a part of a larger low-grade DCIS based on findings in minimal invasive breast biopsy (CNB or VAB) alone. The European Working Group on Breast Screening Pathology recommends that it should always be kept in mind that such proliferations at a biopsy may represent the periphery of a more established lesion of DCIS [9].

Underestimation risk associated with ADH at VAB

The dilemma in decision making on management of an ADH-like lesion at MIBB is the uncertainty whether it represents a part of a larger DCIS or is an isolated lesion. There is only limited information on histological, imaging, and clinical factors, which can reliably predict the answer. These include lesion size and number of ADH foci in biopsy specimens, radiological features, needle type, and association with calcification and individual cell necrosis. Until now, none of these features can reliably exclude an upgrade in the surgical specimen. However, risk factors for underestimation of malignancy include multifocality with more than 2 foci of ADH on CNB, and associated individual cell necrosis, this latter might be suggestive but definitely not affirmatively diagnostic of a low-grade DCIS. In addition, lack of radiological-pathological correlation as lack of calcification in MIBB specimens on VAB performed for mammographically suspicious calcifications as well as ADH-like lesions as only histopathological finding in biopsies taken for mass lesions on imaging. Conflicting results of several studies analyzing the risk factors of synchronous malignancy in MIBB with ADH published in recent years as the large range of their underestimation rates (2%–50%), as summarized in Table 3, seems to be depending on the type of biopsy performed (CNB or VAB), age (> 50 years), and on associated microcalcification on imaging. But above all, upgrade rates are generally higher in biopsies without any pathological correlation to the target lesion in imaging. Table 3 summarizes the literature update on ADH since 2015.

Table 3.

Summary of the recent literature on ADH since 2015

Author and year Number of patients analyzed or type of publication if no patients have been analyzed (e.g., review or comment) Findings Conclusions
Ahn et al. 2016 [10]

n = 103

Upgrade

Underestimation rates

FEA (5.9%)

FEA + ADH (44.4%)

ADH 27.3%

Recommend OE especially if calcification is present
Badan et al. 2016 [11]

n = 40

Upgrade

Underestimation rate

ADH in CNB (50%)

ADH in VAB (25%)

Recommend OE
Co et al. 2018 [12] n = 104 ADH in CNB (41%) Suspicious mammogram correlates with upgrade
Collins et al. 2016 [13] Association between extent of ADH/LN and BC risk

1–2 foci ADH (OR 3.5)

1–2 foci LN (OR 5.2)

≥ 3 foci ADH (OR 2.7)

≥ 3 foci LN (OR 8.0)

No influence of extent of ADH or LN on BC risk
Degnim et al. 2016 [14] Association between extent of ADH /LN and BC risk

1–2 foci ADH (RR:2.65)

2 foci ADH (RR: 5.19)

≥ 3 foci ADH (RR 8.94)

1–2 foci LN (RR:2.58)

2 foci LN (RR: 3.49)

≥ 3 foci LN (RR 4.97)

BC risk increases with ADH/LN extension

p < 0.001

Donaldson et al. 2018 [15]

n = 393

Upgrade

ADH/LN on CNB No upgrade
Khoury et al. 2016 [16]

n = 100

Upgrade

Underestimation rate

ADH in VAB (15%)

Extension and nb of positive cores correlate with upgrade
Latronico et al. 2018 [17] Upgrade (n = 45) and long-term follow-up (n = 12)

Upgrade after ADH 45%

BC (8%)

Recommend OE
Menen et al. 2017 [18]

n = 175

Follow-up after/wo surgery

BC 12% (after surgery)

BC 5.6% (only follow-up)

Contralateral BC only after surgery

Prior history of breast cancer was the only variable associated with subsequent breast cancer events (hazard ratio 12.53)
Menes et al. 2017 [19]

BC risk after ADH in CNB (n = 1727)

OE (n = 635)

10-year cumulative BC risk

2.6% (CNB)

5.7% (OE)

BC risk after ADH diagnosis is higher
Mesurolle et al. 2014 [20]

n = 50

Upgrade ADH in CNB

Underestimation rate

ADH in CNB (56%)

OE recommended
Pena et al. 2017 [21]

n = 399

Low BC risk after

ADH in CNB

Underestimation rate

ADH in CNB (16%)

Low BC risk

ADH in CNB (4–9%)

Low BC risk if

(1) lack of necrosis and

(2) 1–2 foci or ≥ 3 foci with ≥ 90% removal

Renshaw and Gould, 2016 [4]

Upgrade and

Long-term clinical follow-up

175 ADH on CNB

Underestimation rate

ADH in CNB (30.3%)

BC after surgery (11.5%)

Immediate BC risk is higher for ADH than LN

Long-term BC risk is higher for LN than ADH

Yu et al. 2015 [22]

Upgrade

ADH in CNB (83)

Underestimation rate

ADH in CNB 9.5%

Age, associated mass, and calcification distribution are independent factors for upgrade
Rageth et al. (data presented at the conference, but not yet published)

Upgrade and histological criteria

207 ADH cases

(56 CNBs and 151 VABs)

Underestimation rate

ADH in CNB 57%

ADH in VAB 33%

Factors in upgrade

(1) Method (CNB vs. VAB)

(2) The presence of multifocality

(3) Absence of associated calcification

Since upgrade rates in so-called lower-risk subgroups exceed the defined acceptable limits for underestimation (10% for DCIS and 5% for IC), OE is recommended in general even if the lesion seems to be completely excised by VAB. Surveillance instead of OE might be appropriate in special situations (especially in older age) since most of the IC that develop after ADH are small low-grade cancers. Surveillance is also necessary after OE because such patients are at a higher risk of developing cancer also distant from the excised ADH lesion and also in the contralateral breast.

Voting

If a CNB returned ADH on histology,

100% of the participants thought the lesion should be excised. 21% thought therapeutic VAB excision was acceptable and 74% thought therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed. 5% were undecided.

If a VAB returned ADH on histology,

51% of the participants thought that therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed and 42% thought that surveillance was adequate (Table 9).

Table 9.

Summary of the voting for each pure B3 lesion

A diagnosis of a visible (on imaging by mammography or ultrasound) lesion by means of spring-loaded core biopsy (14–18 g) has been made What method of excision should be chosen A lesion has been removed by means of VAB and the lesion on imaging seems to be removed
The lesion should be removed The lesion should not be removed Undecided/abstain VAB is acceptable Open biopsy should be preferred Undecided/abstain An open re-excision should be performed A repeat VAB should be performed Wait and see is justified Undecided/abstain
ADH 35 (100%) 0 0 8 (21.1%) 28 (73.7%) 2 (5.3%) 20 (51.3%) 0 18 (46.2%) 1 (2.6%)
FEA 43 (65.2%) 14 (21.2%) 9 (13.6%) 51 (75%) 15 (22.1%) 2 (2.9%) 2 (2.9%) 0 67 (97.1%) 0
LN 46 (68.7%) 9 (13.4%) 12 (17.9%) 34 (50%) 28 (41.2%) 6 (8.8%) 8 (11.6%) 0 58 (84.1%) 3 (4.3%)
PL 39 (76.5%) 9 (17.6%) 3 (5.9%) 37 (71.2%) 12 (23.1%) 3 (5.8%) 0 0 52 (98.1%) 1 (1.9%)
PT 48 (98%) 1 (2%) 0 11 (22%) 36 (72%) 3 (6%) 4 (7.8%) 0 45 (88.2%) 2 (3.9%)
RS 28 (59.6%) 15 (31.9%) 4 (8.5%) 37 (80.4%) 7 (15.2%) 2 (4.3%) 2 (4.3%) 0 42 (89.4%) 3 (6.4%)

Consensus recommendation of the panel

A lesion containing ADH diagnosed by CNB or VAB should undergo open surgical excision. Surveillance can be justified only in special situations after discussion at the MDM (Table 10).

Table 10.

Summary of the recommendations for each B3 lesion

Diagnosis made by CNB Diagnosis made by VAB
ADH OE OE. surveillance can be considered in a few special situations after discussion at the MDM
FEA VAB to complete removal of the lesion visible in any imaging method Surveillance is justified if the radiological lesion has been removed
LN OE or VAB (remove US-visible lesion) OE or high-risk surveillance if the radiological lesion has been removed
PL Remove by VAB
PT OE. Free margins in borderline and malignant PTs Follow-up in completely excised benign PTs surveillance is justified
RS VAB or OE of visible lesion Surveillance is justified if the radiological lesion has been removed

VAB usually the lesion should not exceed 2.5 cm in diameter. For larger lesions, OE is preferred, LN only classical type. LN pleomorphic, LIN 3, LN extended, and LN with necrosis are defined as B5a lesions and should undergo OE, PL with atypia: Such a lesion should not be classified as papilloma, but rather as FEA or ADH according to the type of atypia found

Flat epithelial atypia (FEA)

Histological criteria of FEA

FEA is a low-grade neoplastic lesion consisting of a few layers of neoplastic columnar type cells with low-grade (monomorphic) atypia without any secondary architecture (flat architecture). The immunophenotype of a FEA lesion is identical to that of a low-grade DCIS, which is negative for basal cytokeratins and positive for estrogen receptors. On histology, there is a classical association with low-grade or highly differentiated lesions as highly differentiated invasive carcinoma, ADH/DCIS, and to the other B3 lesions as classical LN. There are often associated calcifications and, therefore FEA is sometimes the only biopsy target at mammography.

Biology of FEA

FEA seems to be associated with a very slight increased breast cancer risk (1–2 times). Underestimation of risk is associated with ADH at MIBB.

Lesions found after FEA on breast core-needle CNB and VAB are mainly ADH and low-grade DCIS, while invasive carcinoma (in most instances highly differentiated) can occur but less frequent. Recommendation of current guidelines is increasingly in favor of surveillance if the lesion is small and the radiological findings were completely removed by CNB or VAB. Table 4 summarizes the literature update on FEA since 2015.

Table 4.

Summary of the recent literature on FEA since 2015

Author and year Number of patients analyzed or type of publication if no patients have been analyzed (e.g., review or comment) Findings Conclusions
Acott and Mancino 2016 [23]

n = 46

Isolated FEA on CNB

Underestimation

FEA on CNB

2%

May warrant close surveillance
Berry et al. 2016 [24]

n = 27

FEA on CNBs

Underestimation

FEA on CNB

11%

Only patients with a history of breast cancer or pure, prominent FEA on CNB disease should proceed to excisional biopsy
Chan et al. 2018 [25]

n = 195

Isolated FEA on CNB

Non-operative management of biopsy-proven FEA can be considered in the absence of ADH and radiology–pathology discordance
Dialani et al. 2014 [26]

n = 37

Isolated FEA on VAB

Upgrade

FEA on VAB (6.9%)

If there are no residual microcalcifications following CNB, imaging follow-up as an alternative to surgery may be a reasonable option
Lamb et al. 2017 [27]

Pure FEA on CNB/VAB

Upgrade (n = 200) and follow-up (n = 8)

Upgrade

FEA in CNB/VAB (2.5%)

Recommend surveillance rather than surgical excision
McCroskey et al. 2018 [28]

FEA on VAB (43)

FEA/ADH on VAB (18)

FEA/LN on VAB (8)

No upgrade Excision may not be necessary for pure FEA and FEA with atypical ductal hyperplasia limited to ≤ 2 terminal duct-lobular units, if at least 90% of calcifications have been removed on biopsy
Rudin et al. 2017 [29] Metanalysis of 32 studies Management change in 25% Recommendation of OE after FEA on CNB
Samples et al. 2017 [30] Interobserver diagnostic variability Wide variation in the diagnosis of FEA Diagnostic criteria may vary
Schiaffino et al. 2018 [31]

Upgrade

FEA on VAB (n = 48)

Upgrade

FEA in VAB (2%)

Surgical excision may not be necessary in patients with VAB diagnosis of isolated FEA, without residual microcalcifications post-procedure and with concordant mammography
Yamashita et al. 2016 [32] Interobserver diagnostic variability Morphological criteria as nuclear ellipticity for columnar cell lesion Consequent diagnostic criteria
Yu et al. 2015 [22]

n = 128

Upgrade FEA on VAB

No upgrade No OE is necessary if calcification is removed

Voting

If a CNB returned FEA on histology,

65% of the participants thought the lesion should be excised. 75% thought therapeutic VAB excision was acceptable and 22% thought therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed.

If a VAB returned FEA on histology,

3% of the participants thought that therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed and 97% thought that surveillance was adequate (Table 9).

Consensus recommendation of the panel

A lesion containing FEA which is visible on imaging should undergo excision with VAB. Thereafter surveillance is justified (Table 10).

Classical lobular neoplasia

Histological criteria

Lobular neoplasia (LN) includes a large spectrum and continuum of atypical intralobular proliferations of the TDLs of the breast, consisting of non-cohesive proliferating cells. Under the term “Classical Lobular Neoplasia,” the consensus conference discussed the two lesions defined by the WHO classification as classical lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) and atypical lobular hyperplasia (ALH), both of which represent the large majority of lobular neoplasia. ALH/LCIS are characterized by non-cohesive proliferations of atypical type A and/or B epithelial cells with mild-to-moderate nuclear atypia in about 85% of cases [33]. In case of LCIS, these cells expand more than 50% of the acini in a terminal duct-lobular unit (TDLU), while in ALH this affects less than 50%. When diagnosed on minimal invasive biopsy (VAB), these lesions are reported as B3 by the pathologist. In case of diagnostic difficulty in the histological diagnosis, the use of a combined immunohistochemistry with E-Cadherin and Catenin p120 is useful to rule out morphological differential diagnoses especially as solid DCIS.

In contrast, the rare morphologic variants including pleomorphic LN which demonstrates marked nuclear pleomorphism equivalent to that of high-grade ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), with or without apocrine features. A florid LN along with marked distention of TDLUs or ducts, often with accompanying mass formation and comedo type necrosis, are reported as B5a as DCIS and are not discussed as LN in this consensus report. The underlying rationale is that in contrast to LCIS and ALH, 25–60% of cases with LN (B5a category) variants on CNB/VAB are found to upgrade to carcinoma on excision [3436]. The reproducibility of all LIN ALH versus LCIS is poor, the prognostic significance between LIN1,2 is not supported by evidence, so it is not endorsed by current European guidelines (AGO [37]). It is a simplified and practical way to categorize these lesions as B3 (e.g., as classical LN) and B5a (as pleomorphic or florid LN) especially on CNB and VAB.

Biological behavior

ALH/LCIS has to be considered as both, a risk factor and a non-obligate precursor of invasive breast carcinoma conferring an 8 to 10 times relative risk compared to the general population [38, 39]. The absolute risk of either lobular or ductal breast cancer is in the range of 1–2% per year with a cumulative long-term rate of more than 20% at 15 years and 35% at 35 years [39, 40]. The risk is bilateral with ipsilateral predominance [41, 42].

Until now, no single histopathological or clinical factor alone has been identified which could link the development of breast cancer to a histological diagnosis of classical LN.

Risk of breast cancer at CNB/VAB

The management of patients with classic LN when diagnosed on MIBB (CNB/VAB) has been controversial due to a wide range (0–60%) of reported upgrade rates to DCIS or invasive carcinoma on excision. Those rates result above all from disregarding radiological–pathological correlation [4346]. LCIS and ALH are infrequently seen as the sole finding in CNB or VAB accounting for 0.5–2.9% of biopsies taken for histologic assessment of mammography-detected lesions. Therefore, recent studies of classic LCIS and ALH as incidental finding in cases where a different benign pathological lesion in the same biopsy has been proved to represent the correlation to the radiological biopsy target with concordant imaging findings report very low (~ 1–4%) excisional upgrade rates of classic LCIS and ALH to carcinoma. Regarding ALH, the largest study showed a relative risk of 8.0 for women with 3 or more foci of ALH compared to 3 or 5 for women with 1 or 2 foci, respectively. The upgrade rates for classical LCIS are generally higher (13% to 18%) when LCIS represented the radiologic target as calcification and still higher for mass lesions and calcification on imaging with radio-pathological discordance [4749]. Current (AGO [37]) guidelines in favor of surgical management of classical LN include the presence of another B3 lesion, another lesion indicative for excision alone, the presence of a visible or mass lesion or any discordant lesions between histology and imaging (AGO [37]). Table 5 summarizes the literature update on classical LN in CNB/VAB since 2015.

Table 5.

Summary of the recent literature on LN since 2015

Author and year Number of patients analyzed or type of publication if no patients have been analyzed (e.g., review or comment) Findings Conclusions
Calhoun et al. 2016 [50]

n = 76 on CNB

Upgrade after 15 years follow-up

10 cases (13%) with upgrade The extent of LN in CNB may be an indicator of the likelihood of upgrade to carcinoma
Donaldson et al. 2018 [15]

n = 393 on CNB with ADH/LN

Upgrade rate and

follow-up (87 months)

Upgrade in n = 181 (46%)

The 7-year cumulative breast cancer incidence was 9.9%

Multiple foci do not influence BC development

Close clinical and radiologic follow-up for more than 5 years in this patient population

Fives et al. 2016 [51] n = 25 LN on CNB accompanying fibroadenomas Upgrade in 1 case (5%) Rare upgrade
King et al. 2015 [40]

n = 1004

with /wo chemoprevention

Median follow-up 81 months

10-Year cumulative risk

7% With chemoprevention

21% (3.2% per year) with no chemoprevention

Chemoprevention reduced BC risk

Volume of disease, (ratio of slides with LCIS to total number of slides) was associated with breast cancer development

(p = 0.008)

Mao et al. 2017 [52]

BC risk in LN

-Hormone receptor status

-Skin color

LN was higher in HR positive and in black patients
Maxwell et al. 2016 [53]

n = 392 pure LN

326 with OE

Upgrade to pleomorphic LN

In 23/326 cases (7%)

Screen detected LN

-In younger women

-Unilateral

-Non-pleomorphic

Nakhlis et al. 2016 [54] n = 77 on CNB Upgrade in 2 of 77 cases (2%) Routine excision is not indicated for patients with pure LN on CB and concordant imaging findings
Renshaw and Gould, 2016 [4]

n = 69 CNB with LN

Upgrade

Follow-up

Upgrade in 17 of 69 cases (25.8%)

Immediate BC risk is higher for ADH than LN

Long-term BC risk is higher for LN than ADH

Schmidt et al. 2018 [55]

n = 178 on CNB

115 OE

54 Surveillance (55 months follow-up)

Upgrade in 13/115 cases (11%)

1/54 Cases developed BC after follow-up (2%)

Low-upgrade rate and low BC risk
Sen et al. 2016 [56] n = 447 (ALH and LCIS)

Upgrade ALH 2.4%

Upgrade LCIS 8.4%

Excision is recommended for LCIS on CNB and for ALH surveillance at 6, 12, and 24 months
Susnik et al. 2016 [47]

n = 302 of 370

Upgrade after OE

Upgrade

In 3.5% (8/228) pure LN lesions

In 26.7% in “LCIS variants” (4/15) in 28.3% in LN with ductal atypia (15/53)

LN with non-classic morphology or with associated ductal atypia requires surgical excision, this can be avoided in pure LN
Xie et al. 2017 [57]

Survival outcome in SEER database

(n = 208 + 5756 cases)

Bilateral or partial mastectomy

OS after partial mastectomy without radiotherapy was not inferior to patients who underwent bilateral prophylactic mastectomy Low breast cancer-specific mortality in patients with LCIS, therefore aggressive prophylactic surgery like bilateral prophylactic mastectomy should not be advocated for most patients with LCIS

Voting

If a CNB returned Classical LN on histology,

69% of the participants thought the lesion should be excised. 50% thought therapeutic VAB excision was acceptable and 41% thought therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed.

If a VAB returned Classical LN on histology,

12% of the participants thought that therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed and 84% thought that surveillance was adequate (Table 9).

Consensus recommendation of the panel

A lesion containing classical LN, which is visible on imaging should undergo excision with VAB. Thereafter surveillance is justified if there is no pathological–radiological discordance and no residual lesion.

In contrast, morphologic variants of LN (LIN 3, pleomorphic LCIS, and florid LCIS), which are reported as B5a lesions should undergo OE (Table 10).

Papillary lesions

Histology and clinical presentation of PL

On imaging, intraductal papillomas vary in size and in presentation showing a spectrum of mass lesions to cystic and calcified lesions. Histology demonstrates a papillary proliferation as the basis with a central fibrovascular core containing ductal and myoepithelial cells. In case of any histological uncertainty regarding the presence of myoepithelial cells, the use of immunohistochemistry (p 63, basal cytokeratins, and estrogen receptors) is helpful. In the current WHO classification of breast tumors, papillary lesions are divided into (a) papillomas, (b) papillomas with atypia (ADH or classical LN), both belonging to the B3 category at MIBB (small solitary papillomas (< 2 mm) can be categorized as B2 lesion, if the lesion is completely surrounded by a duct structure) and to (c) papillomas with DCIS or papillomas completely involved by more extended DCIS (encapsulated papillary carcinoma), and finally (d) solid papillary carcinoma belonging to B4 or B5a category. Table 6 summarizes the literature update on B3 papillary lesions since 2015.

Table 6.

Summary of the recent literature on PL since 2015

Author and year Number of patients analyzed or type of publication if no patients have been analyzed (e.g., review or comment) Findings Conclusions
Ahn et al. 2018 [58]

n = 520 PL in CNB

250 with OE

Upgrade

Upgrade in 17 of 250 cases (6.8%)

Factors in upgrade

-Bloody nipple charge

-Size on imaging ≥ 15 mm

-BI-RADS≥ 4b

-Peripheral location

-Palpability

Armes et al. 2017 [59]

n = 103 PL on CNB

Upgrade

Upgrade

Overall in 30%

With atypia in 72%

Without atypia in 7%

Conservative management for those without atypia, including those without atypia in which the papillary lesion was found incidental to microcalcification in an adjacent benign lesion
Bianchi et al. 2015 [60]

Upgrade in PL lesions

46 Cases with atypia

68 Cases without atypia

Upgrade in

47.8% (22/46) cases with atypia

13.2% (9/68) without atypia

Underestimation rate in PL without atypia is lower
Khan et al. 2017 [61]

n = 259 PL on CNB

Upgrade in OE (n = 147)

Upgrade

7% without atypia (8/107)

33% with atypia (13/40)

Higher upgrade in PL with atypia
Kim et al. 2016 [62]

n = 230 PL in CNB

Upgrade

In VAB (n = 86)

In OE (n = 144)

Upgrade in 2.6% (6/230)

Upgrade in

BI-RADS 3-4a :1.4% resp. 1.8%

BI-RADS 4b-5: 13% resp. 50%

No association with age and size lesion

Ko et al. 2017 [63]

n = 346 PL in CNB

Upgrade

In VAB (n = 211)

In OE (n = 135)

Upgrade

Overall in 2.3%

If size < 1cm: 0.9%

Size of PL correlates with upgrade

Close follow-up with ultrasound instead of excision

Moon et al. 2016 [64]

n = 65 PL in CNB

Upgrade

In VAB (n = 12)

In OE (n = 53)

Upgrade

In OE in 9% (5/53)

In VAB 8% (1/12)

No recommendation
Niinikoski et al. 2018 [65] n = 80 PL in CNB Small PL in selected patients-OE can be avoided
Pareja et al.. 2016 [66]

Upgrade in OE (n = 171) after PL Without atypia

In CNB

Upgrade

In OE 2.3% (4/171)

Regardless of size, observation is appropriate at radiologic–pathologic concordant CNB
Seely et al. 2017 [67]

n = 107 PL in OE

Upgrade after

VAB (n = 60)

CNB (n = 47)

Upgrade in OE

After VAB in 1.6% (1/60)

After CNB in 8.5% (4/47)

Higher upgrade in OE if PL is diagnosed on CNB
Tatarian et al. 2016 [68]

n = 16 PL in CNB

Upgrade in OE

Upgrade in OE

In 2/16 cases (12.5%)

Surgical excision should be considered in patients with benign papillomas
Tran et al. 2017 [69]

n = 43 PL in CNB

Upgrade in OE

Upgrade in OE

In 1/43 cases (2%)

Low-upgrade rate in OE
Wyss et al. 2014 [70]

n = 156 PL in CNB

Upgrade

In VAB (n = 135) and

Follow-up (n = 21)

(Median 3.5 years)

Upgrade after follow-up

1.2% (2/156)

VAB is recommended as the method of choice for removal of PL
Yamaguchi et al. 2015 [71]

n = 142 PL

Follow-up imaging

After VAB (n = 125)

After CNB (n = 17)

Upgrade in OE (n = 17)

4/17

Discordant lesions should undergo OE
Yang et al. 2018 [72]

n = 116 PL

(On CNB or VAB)

10 mm or smaller

OE n = 74

Surveillance n = 42

Overall upgrade 11% (13/116)

Upgrade after VAB (0%)

Upgrade after CNB (16.5%)

Higher upgrade in OE

-After CNB

-Older age

-Pl with atypia

Voting

If a CNB returned PL on histology,

76.5% of the participants thought the lesion should be excised. 71% thought therapeutic VAB excision was acceptable and 23% thought therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed.

If a VAB returned PL on histology,

none of the participants (1 abstained) thought that therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed and 98% thought that surveillance was adequate (Table 9).

Consensus recommendation of the panel

A PL lesion, which is visible on imaging should undergo excision with VAB. Larger lesions which cannot be completely removed by VAB need open excision. Thereafter surveillance is justified (Table 10).

Phyllodes tumors (PT)

Histological criteria and biological behavior of PT

PTs are rare and consist of around 1–2‰ of all breast biopsies. PTs are biphasic fibroepithelial tumors varying from benign to borderline and malignant diagnostic variants. The latest WHO classification of breast tumors allows three categories depending on the number of stromal mitoses, stromal atypia, and stromal overgrowth. In some cases, the distinction between a benign cellular fibroadenoma and a benign phyllodes tumors remains despite histological diagnostic criteria problematic. Therefore, the WHO classification recommends the diagnosis of a benign fibroepithelial tumor (also categorized as B3 category) in unclear cases. Benign and borderline phyllodes tumors are B3 lesions, a malignant PT is a B5b lesion. B3 forms, particularly the benign forms of PT, are the most common, only up to 20% of all PT tumors are borderline or malignant. Risk for local recurrence at benign PT is around 10–20% and reaches up to 30% at the borderline or malignant forms. Metastatic potential depends on the form, being the highest (15–20%) at the malignant forms. Table 7 summarizes the literature update on B3 phyllodes tumors since 2015.

Table 7.

Summary of the recent literature on PT since 2015

Author and year Number of patients analyzed or type of publication if no patients have been analyzed (e.g., review or comment) Findings Conclusions
Co et al. 2017 [73]

n = 465 PT

281 (59.9%)benign

124 (26.4%) Borderline 64 (13.6%) malignant

384 (82%) Breast-conserving surgery (BCS)

84 (18%) Patients with mastectomy

Median follow-up 85 months

Risk factors for local recurrence

(1) Positive margins (p < 0.001)

(2) BCS (p < 0.001)

Risk factors for local metastases

(1) Large tumor size (p = 0.008)

(2) Malignant component (p < 0.001)

Disease-free survival

99.6% (benign)

100% (borderline)

90.6% (malignant)

Kim et al. 2017 [73]

n = 146 PT (benign)

Surgery (n = 126)

US-VAB (n = 20)

Three cases (2.1%, 3/146) had recurrence and all were in the surgery group (2.4%, 3/126) Clinical follow-up rather than further surgery at benign phyllodes tumor diagnosed at US-VAE, if there is no residual lesion at US
Ouyang et al. 2016 [74]

n = 225 benign PT

Surgery (n = 117)

VAB (n = 108)

5-year cumulative RFS

81.6 (VAB)

8.7% (surgery)

(p = 0.11)

No difference in DFS between OE and VAB removal
Sevinc et al. 2018 [75]

n = 122 PT (benign and borderline)

All underwent surgical excision

No local recurrence occurred in any group

Positive surgical margins in 43 (35%)

Margins ≥ 10 mm in

16 patients (13%)

Margins 2–10 mm in

48 patients (40%)

Margins ≤ 1 mm in

15 patients (12%)

Positive resection margins did not influence local recurrence
Shaaban and Barthelmes 2017 [76]

n = 1702 PT

Literature review (12 studies)

Margin assessment

1 mm distance

10 mm distance

Focal margin involvement

No difference in recurrence rates between a 1- and a 10-mm margin The recurrence rate increases if there is focal margin involvement. 1 mm is acceptable for benign PT
Youk et al. 2015 [77]

n = 41 PT (benign)

OE after VAB (n = 27)

2 Years follow-up with US (n = 14)

Upgrade

2/23 (8.7%) to malignant PT

Residual tumor

15/27 (55%)(at VAB site)

0/14 (0%)(US follow-up)

PTs diagnosed after US-VAB should be surgically excised
Zhou et al. 2016 [78] Sensitivity of definitive PT category in CNB versus OE

The sensitivity of CNB

4.9% (2/41) benign

4.2% (3/71) borderline

25.0% (4/16) malignant

CNB in PT category has low sensitivity

Voting

If a CNB returned PT on histology,

98% of the participants thought the lesion should be excised. 22% thought therapeutic VAB excision was acceptable and 72% thought therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed.

If a VAB returned PT on histology,

8% of the participants thought that therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed and 88% thought that surveillance was adequate (Table 9).

Consensus recommendation of the panel

A PT lesion, which is found by CNB, should undergo open surgical excision with clear margins. If accidentally found by VAB without any corresponding imaging finding, surveillance of a benign PT is justified, while borderline and malignant PTs require re-excision to obtain clear margins (Table 10).

Radial scar

Histological features of RS

Two papers published almost at the same time described the same lesion naming that was named radial scar by Hamperl [79] and scleroelastotic lesion by Eusebi et al. [80]. More recently, the definition of complex sclerosing lesion (CSL) has been proposed. RS is characterized by a central area mimicking a scar, containing one to several ducts showing obliterative mastopathy, and surrounded by elastic fibers. In addition, other ducts converge into the scar-like area in a stellate fashion. The epithelium lining the latter ducts may show a great variety of changes, the most frequent being benign epitheliosis (usual ductal hyperplasia). The central scar-like area together with stellate appearance of the outer ducts easily mimics an invasive carcinoma, both on radiological and histological grounds. RS can be detected during screening mammography and now even more often by tomosynthesis, therefore sampled by CNB or by VAB. There is general agreement that RS alone is a benign lesion, but RS can be occasionally associated with carcinoma. When RS is associated to atypia (such as flat epithelial atypia (FEA), atypical ductal (ADH), or lobular neoplasia (classical LN)), management can the same as recommended in cases of atypia alone. Management is more controversial in cases without atypical lesions. In these cases, upgrade of cancers is associated with architectural distortions and larger masses (≥ 10 mm), calcifications, and older age [69, 71]. The recently published data suggest that in cases of RS diagnosed using CNB or VAB, it must be taken into consideration that (a) accurate and detailed radiological–pathological correlations must be obtained; (b) lesions < 10 mm have lower rate of cancer upgrading; (c) histology is vital in the evaluation of presence or absence of atypical features within the lesion. Table 8 summarizes the literature update on radial scar since 2015.

Table 8.

Summary of the recent literature on RS since 2015

Author and year Number of patients analyzed or type of publication if no patients have been analyzed (e.g., review or comment) Findings Conclusions
Donaldson et al. 2016 [81]

n = 37 RS

upgrade in OE

Upgrade in OE

31/37 (84%, benign)

2/37 (5%, ADH)

3/37 (8%, LN classic)

1/37 (3%, FEA)

Low upgrade in OE at isolated radial scar on preoperative CNB/VAB
Ferreira et al. 2017 [82]

n = 113 RS

25 (CNB)

88 (VAB)

Upgrade in OE

22/113 (20%)

Risk for upgrade

-Type of biopsy (CNB or VAB)

-Presence of atypia

-Presence of calcifications

-Nr. of biopsy fragments

At VAB, the risk of upgrade and malignancy is significantly decreased and so the indication for excisional biopsy seems not to be so imperative
Hou et al. 2016 [83]

n = 113 RS

n = 81 without atypia

n = 32 with atypia

Upgrade in OE

No upgrade in RS without atypia

RS without atypia on VAB has a very low risk for upgrade
Kalife et al. 2016 [84]

n = 100 RS on CNB

41 cases had OE

Upgrade in OE

4/41 (10%) cases with atypia

No cases to malignancy

Close imaging follow-up is adequate for patients with RS/RSL without associated atypia malignancy on CNB
Kim et al. 2016 [85]

n = 88 RS on CNB/VAB

63 (72%) had OE

Upgrade in OE

1/63 (1.5%)

Isolated radial scar may not warrant routine surgical excision given relatively low cancer upgrade rates
Leong et al. 2016 [86]

n = 219 RS on CNB

161 (74%) had OE

Upgrade in OE

1/161 (0.6%)

Surgical excision is unnecessary if radial scar is found at CNB without an associated proliferative lesion but is still indicated when radial scar is associated with atypical ductal hyperplasia or lobular neoplasia
Li et al. 2016 [87]

n = 403 pure RS on CNB

220 (54.6%) had OE

Upgrade in OE

2/220 (0.9%) malignancy

44/220 (20%) ADH

13/220 (5.9%) classical LN

Conservative follow-up with imaging rather than surgical excisions may be more appropriate for isolated RS
Miller et al. 2014 [88]

n = 131 pure RS on CNB

All had OE

Upgrade in OE

2 /131 (1.5%) malignancy

22/131 (17%) high-risk B3 lesion

Excision of RS to rule out associated invasive carcinoma is not warranted, given a 1% rate of upgrade at excision
Nassar et al. 2015 [89]

n = 38 RS

Upgrade in OE

Upgrade in OE

4/38 (10%) malignancy

7/38 (18%) high-risk lesions (1xADH, 6xclassical LN)

Open excision for RS larger than 1.0 cm with worrisome radiographic findings or with radiologic and pathologic discordance is recommended
Park et al. 2016 [90]

n = 10 pure RS on CNB

Upgrade in OE

No upgrade in OE Pure RS on CNB may not need OE

Voting

If a CNB returned RS/CSL on histology,

85% of the participants thought the lesion should be excised. 72% thought therapeutic VAB excision was acceptable and 26% thought therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed.

If a VAB returned RS/CSL on histology,

2% of the participants thought that therapeutic open surgical excision should be performed and 98% thought that surveillance was adequate (Table 9).

Consensus recommendation of the panel

A RS/CSL lesion, which is visible on imaging should undergo therapeutic excision with VAB. Thereafter surveillance is justified (Table 10).

Tables 9 and 10 show the summaries of the votings and the recommendations for each B3 lesion.

Discussion

The panel agreed that underestimation rates should be below 5% for IC and below 10% for DCIS. If a certain B3 lesion shows an upgrade rate of more than 10%, in general surveillance was not recommended. Computer-aided decision making would be of interest. Bahl et al. [91] show the potential of machine learning methodology in the field of high-risk breast lesions predicting the risk of upgrade (editorial by Shaffer [92]).

Other recommendations [93, 94] favor recommendations from the consensus meetings. They do not explicitly propose VAB as we do, probably due to the fact, that VAB is not so well established in other countries yet.

The 2018 recommendations confirm largely the 2016 recommendations. Results presented in the recent literature confirm the 2016 recommendations for surveillance after a B3 lesion diagnosed by VAB or CNB, especially for FEA, RS, PL, and PT. Upgrade rates are high in ADH and in LN which are not only focal or an incidental finding especially if pathological–radiological concordance is not given. LN lesions with pleomorphic, extended features, and LN with necrosis should be reported as B5a lesions and should undergo OE as DCIS. Our recommendations for ADH are slightly less liberal in 2018 than in 2016 and tend more towards OE.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank all members of the MIBB working group for their reliable good work of entering data for all of their patients who had a VAB. Active breast units entering data in 2017 were as follows: Institut für Radiologie, Kantonsspital Aarau, Aarau (D.Schwegler-Guggemos), Radiologie, Brust-Zentrum Hirslanden Kliniken Aarau Cham Zug, Aarau (W.Santner), Interdisziplinäres Brustzentrum Baden, Kantonsspital Baden, Baden (R.Kubik-Huch), Radiologie St. Claraspital, St. Claraspital Basel, Basel (C.Oursin), Radiologisches Institut, Bethesda-Spital Basel, Basel (P.Trabucco), Frauenklinik Radiologie, Brustzentrum Universitätsspital Basel, Basel (S.Dellas), Radiologie Nordwest, IMAMED, Basel (A.Schmid), Ospedale San Giovanni, Centro di Senologia della Svizzera Italiana, Bellinzona (S.Zehbe), Radiologie, Lindenhofspital Bern, Bern (S.Gasser), Praxis und Senologie Lindenhofspital, Gemeinschaftspraxis Brun del Re/Thomi, Bern (R.Brun del Re), Brustzentrum, Inselspital, Bern (J.Krol), Klinik Engeried, Brustzentrum Bern, Bern (M.Sonnenschein), Radiologie, Hirslanden Brustzentrum Bern Biel, Bern (P.Sager), Radiologie, Spitalzentrum Biel, Biel (U.Tesche), Hauptstrasse 11, Praxisklinik Binningen, Binningen (D.Musfeld), Brust-Zentrum, Spital Bülach, Bülach (M.L.Kaufmann), Radiologie, Clinique des Grangettes, Chênes-Bougeries (K.Kinkel), Frauenklinik Fontana, Brustzentrum Kantonsspital Graubünden, Chur (P.Fehr), Brustzentrum Thurgau/Radiologie, Kantonsspital Frauenfeld, Brustzentrum Radiologie, Frauenfeld (D.Wetter), Brustzentrum Thurgau/Frauenklinik, Kantonsspital Frauenfeld, Frauenfeld (M.Fehr), Radiologie, Hôpital cantonal Fribourg, Fribourg (Q.D.Vo), Service de Radiologie, Hôpital Daler, Fribourg (PDi Blasio), Radiologie, Institut ImageRive, Genève (F.Couson), L’Institut d’Imagerie Médicale, Imagerie médicale Genève, Genève (V.Cerny), Service de Radiologie. Unité de radiologie gynécologique, Hôpitaux Universitaires Genève, Genève (D.Botsikas), Institut d’Imagerie Médicale, Clinique Genolier, Genolier (S.Schlup Pidoux), Radiologie, Kantonales Spital Grabs, Grabs (D.Wruk), Centre d’imagerie sénologique, Imagerie du Flon, Lausanne (D.Lepori), RAD Radiologie Diagnostique et Radiologie Interventionnelle, CHUV, Lausanne (J.-Y.Meuwly), Radiologie, Clinique de la Source, Lausanne (R.-M.Maréchal), Centro di Radiologia e Senologia Luganese, Centro di Radiologia e Senologia Luganese, Lugano (G.Kampmann), Clinica Sant’Anna, Clinica Sant’Anna, Lugano (D.Faedda), Radiologie, EOC Lugano, Lugano (V. A.Vitale), Radiologie, Senologia Ticino, Breast Unit, Lugano (E.Pusterla), Radiologie-Mammadiagnostik, Kantonsspital Luzern, Luzern (C.Kurtz), Gynäkologie, Kantonsspital Luzern, Luzern (S.Bucher), Hirslanden-Klinik St. Anna, Senologie, Hirslanden-Klinik St. Anna, Luzern (R.Goette), Radiologie, Spital Männedorf, Männedorf (C.Stoupis), Brustteam Zürich, Brustteam Zürich, Richterswil (R.Stoffel), Frauenklinik/Brustzentrum SenoSuisse, Kantonsspital Schaffhausen, Schaffhausen (K.Breitling), Spital Limmattal Radiologie, Brustzentrum Zürich-West, Schlieren (S.Potthast), Radiologie, Röntgeninstitut Schwyz AG, Schwyz (A.Mayer), Radiologie, Institut de Radiologie de Sion, Sion (D.Fournier), Gynäkologie und Gebursthilfe, Kantonsspital Solothurn, Solothurn (F.Maurer-Marti), Tumor- und Brustzentrum ZeTuP, St. Gallen, Tumor- und Brustzentrum ZeTuP, St. Gallen, St. Gallen (V.Dupont Lampert), Brustzentrum Kantonsspital St. Gallen, Brustzentrum St. Gallen, St. Gallen (D.Matt), Radiologie im Silberturm, Radiologie im Silberturm, St.Gallen (A.Papathanassiou), Radiologie, Spital STS AG, Thun (I.Honnef), Frauenklinik, GZO Spital Wetzikon, Wetzikon (J.Schneider), Frauenklinik Kantonsspital Winterthur, Brustzentrum Kantonsspital Winterthur/RIL, Winterthur (T.Hess), Radiologie, Radiologie am Graben, Winterthur (P.Scherr), Radiologie, Radiologiezentrum Zug, Zug (M.Livers), Brust-Zentrum Zürich Seefeld, Brust-Zentrum Zürich Seefeld, Zürich (C.Tausch), Brustzentrum, Klinik im Park Hirslanden, Zürich (S.Hosch), Gynäkologie/Radiologie, BrustCentrum Zürich-Bethanien, Zürich (O.Köchli), Klinik für Gynäkologie, Universitätsspital Zürich, Zürich (D.Fink), Frauenklinik Maternité, Stadtspital Triemli, Zürich (S.von Orelli).

Compliance with ethical standards

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest in the context of this publication.

Ethical approval

All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments. Informed consent: Data collected are part of the mandatory national quality assurance database, why no additional informed consent had to be obtained from the patients included in the study.

Informed consent

Data collected are part of the mandatory national quality assurance database, why no additional informed consent had to be obtained from the patients included in the study.

Footnotes

The original version of this article was revised due to a retrospective Open Access order.

Change history

5/31/2019

The article Second International Consensus Conference on lesions of uncertain malignant potential in the breast (B3 lesions), written by Christoph J Rageth, Elizabeth AM O’Flynn, Katja Pinker, Rahel A Kubik-Huch, Alexander Mundinger, Thomas Decker, Christoph Tausch, Florian Dammann, Pascal A. Baltzer, Eva Maria Fallenberg, Maria P Foschini, Sophie Dellas, Michael Knauer, Caroline Malhaire, Martin Sonnenschein, Andreas Boos, Elisabeth Morris, Zsuzsanna Varga, was originally published electronically on the publisher’s internet portal (currently SpringerLink) on November 30, 2018 without open access.

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