Publication | Closed Access
Specimen adequacy and false-negative diagnosis rate in fine-needle aspirates of palpable breast masses
82
Citations
14
References
1998
Year
Including the number of ECCs as a parameter of adequacy could reduce the rate of false-negative FNA diagnoses of palpable breast masses by approximately 50%. However, the presence or even abundance of ECCs does not eliminate the potential for a false-negative cytologic diagnosis. Cytologic diagnoses must be correlated with clinical and imaging findings (the triple test) to reduce the rate of false-negative cases, but benign triple test results do not entirely exclude the possibility of carcinoma, and such cases require periodic follow-up.
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