Posts Tagged ‘atypical lobular hyperplasia’

Update on My Post: Why is There No Consensus on How to Treat Some Diagnoses Found on Core Biopsy?

I wrote an article a while back called “What Your Core Needle Biopsy Diagnosis Means” to help patients understand why sometimes even a “benign” diagnosis may require a surgical excision.  While writing that article, I spoke to many of my colleagues in breast pathology and breast imaging and found out that there is a marked [...]

Change in Diagnosis on Core Biopsy

Question: I had a core biopsy for calcium in my right breast that showed “focal atypical lobular hyperplasia” – my doctor recommended surgery but I chose to get a second opinion and that said my biopsy was benign and said there was no atypical lobular hyperplasia. I would prefer not to have surgery but [...]

What Your Core Needle Biopsy Diagnosis Means

In the past decade, core needle biopsy has taken over fine needle aspiration (FNA) as the main tool for diagnosing image-detected or palpable breast lesions. While this biopsy technique is just a sample, cores of breast tissue are removed vs. individual cells as in FNA and thus the pathologist has more information to make an [...]

New Tutorial on Breast Pathology

I have uploaded Part I of a Tutorial on Breast Pathology which I hope will be informative for anyone interested in learning some of the “basics” of breast cancer diagnosis. The file is in “pdf” format.  If you have any questions or comments, feel free to post a comment online or contact me via email. [...]