The aim of this study was the realisation and clinical application of MR-guided vacuum biopsy for percutaneous excisional and incisional biopsy of enhancing breast lesions. A breast biopsy system and procedure have been developed which allow precise and safe access to breast lesions in any location and use of vacuum biopsy (VB) under MR guidance. Fifty-one patients with 55 MR-detected lesions were examined. Verification of these diagnoses included re-excision histology of all 14 malignancies and for benign lesions retrospective correlation of histology and imaging, assessment of complete or partial removal of the enhancing area directly after VB (40 of 40 lesions) and follow-up MRI (33 of 40 lesions), which in contrast to conventional needle biopsy can be used as proof of representative removal. Fifty-four of 55 procedures (including 15 lesions = 5 mm and another 26 lesions of 5-10 mm size) were successful. One failure was caused by incorrect use of the VB gun. Vacuum biopsy yielded 14 malignancies and 40 benign lesions. With the available verification techniques all diagnoses proved correct. Percutaneous VB became possible under MR guidance. With minimal invasion it allowed increased certainty and accuracy even for very small lesions.
Purpose: Genetic polymorphisms of cytokine-encoding genes are known to predispose to malignant disease. Interleukin (IL)-1 and IL-6 are crucially involved in breast carcinogenesis. Whether polymorphisms of the genes encoding IL-1 (IL1) and IL-6 (IL6) also influence breast cancer risk is unknown. Experimental Design: In the present case-control study, we ascertained three polymorphisms of the IL1gene cluster [À889 C/T polymorphism of the IL1a gene (IL1A), À511C/T polymorphism of the IL1b promoter (IL1B promoter), a polymorphism of IL1b exon 5 (IL1B exon 5)], an 86-bp repeat in intron 2 of the IL1 receptor antagonist gene (IL1RN), and the À174 G/C polymorphism of the IL6 gene (IL6) in 269 patients with breast cancer and 227 healthy controls using PCR and pyrosequencing. Results: Polymorphisms within the IL1 gene cluster and the respective haplotypes were not associated with the presence and the phenotype of breast cancer. The IL6 polymorphism was significantly associated with breast cancer. Odds ratios for women with one or two high-risk alleles versus women homozygous for the low-risk allele were 1.5 (95% confidence interval, 1.04-2.3; P = 0.04) and 2.0 (95% confidence interval, 1.1-3.6; P = 0.02), respectively. No association was ascertained between presence of the IL6 polymorphism and various clinicopathologic variables. Conclusions: Although polymorphisms within the IL1 gene cluster do not seem to influence breast cancer risk or phenotype, presence of the À174C IL6 allele increases the risk of breast cancer in Caucasian women in a dose-dependent fashion.
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