AJR Am J Roentgenol
January 1987
Recurrence of cancer in the irradiated breast is an uncommon but potentially curable problem. Posttreatment mammograms were studied in 45 patients who had biopsies of an irradiated breast for suspected local recurrence to evaluate the usefulness of mammography in detecting such recurrences. Of 23 biopsy-proven recurrences, eight (35%) were detected by mammography only, nine (39%) were detected by physical examination only, and six (26%) were detected by both.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExcretory urography could be performed less frequently if some combinations of genitourinary signs and symptoms were found to be predictive of either a specific disease or normality. To explore this possibility, the authors conducted a prospective study involving more than 3,000 patients at three institutions (a teaching hospital, a community hospital, and a health maintenance organization). Predictive algorithms were obtained by application of a polychotomous logistic regression model but did poorly at differentiating normal from abnormal patients or arriving at a specific diagnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn attempt was made to improve upon selection criteria for the performance of upper gastrointestinal (UGI) series in three settings: a teaching hospital, a community hospital, and a health maintenance organization. Two statistical techniques, the polychotomous logistic model (to develop predictive algorithms for the identification of specific diseases) and the maximum attainable discrimination technique, were used to show the relationship between the percentage of patients with any disease detected and the percentage of UGI examinations performed. Results showed that neither technique improved significantly upon selection criteria for identifying patients with abnormal UGI series.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe reviewed the radiographs of patients undergoing negative breast biopsies on the basis of false positive mammograms. In a small number of these patients, the radiologic error was attributable to the summation effect of superimposed focal areas of normal or dysplastic breast tissue giving the false impression of a mass. This summation effect more frequently results in an equivocal radiologic impression, often with a recommendation for short interval repeat mammograms, rather than an actual biopsy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe role of mammography in evaluating tumor response was examined in 27 patients undergoing definitive radiation therapy for breast cancer. Radiographic changes observed after treatment included progressive skin thickening, fibrosis of the subcutaneous tissue, and breast retraction. The persistence of a mass more than six months after irradiation suggests treatment failure.
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