A new isolated mediastinal lymph node or small pulmonary nodule arising during breast cancer surveillance following curative surgery: Clinical factors that differentiate malignant from benign lesions

Tae Yong Kim, Kyung Hun Lee, Sae Won Han, Do Youn Oh, Seock Ah Im, Tae You Kim, Wonshik Han, Kyubo Kim, Eui Kyu Chie, In Ae Park, Young Tae Kim, Dong Young Noh, Sung Whan Ha, Yung Jue Bang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: A newly isolated mediastinal lymph node (LN) or a small pulmonary nodule, which appears during breast cancer surveillance, may pose a diagnostic dilemma with regard to malignancy. We conducted this study to determine which clinical factors were useful for the differentiation of malignant lesions from benign lesions under these circumstances. Materials and Methods: We enrolled breast cancer patients who were presented with a new isolated mediastinal LN or small pulmonary nodule that arose during surveillance, and whose lesions were pathologically confirmed. Tissue diagnosis was made by mediastinoscopy, video-assisted thoracic surgery or thoracotomy. Results: A total of 43 patients were enrolled (mediastinal LN, 13 patients; pulmonary nodule, 30 patients). Eighteen patients (41.9%) were pathologically confirmed to have a benign lesion (benign group), and 25 patients (58.1%) were confirmed to have malignant lesion (malignant group). Between the two groups, the initial tumor size (p=0.096) and N stage (p=0.749) were similar. Hormone receptor negativity was more prevalent in the malignant group (59.1% vs. 40.9%, p=0.048). The mean lesion size was larger in the malignant group than in the benign group (20.8 mm vs. 14.4 mm, p=0.024). Metastatic lesions had a significantly higher value of maximal standardized uptake (mSUV) than that of benign lesions (6.4 vs. 3.4, p=0.021). Conclusion: Hormone receptor status, lesion size, and mSUV on positron emission tomography are helpful in the differentiation of malignant lesions from benign lesions in breast cancer patients who were presented with a new isolated mediastinal LN or small pulmonary nodule during surveillance.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)280-287
Number of pages8
JournalCancer Research and Treatment
Volume46
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014

Keywords

  • Benign
  • Breast neoplasms
  • Mediastinal lymph node
  • Neoplasm metastasis
  • Pulmonary nodule

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