The natural history of mammographic calcifications subjected to interval follow-up
M. E. Berend, D. C. Sullivan, P. J. Kornguth, C. S. Skinner, A. Ost, J. D. Iglehart and M. A. Skinner
Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC.
The purpose of this investigation was to determine the natural history and
risk of malignancy associated with isolated indeterminate
microcalcifications subjected to interval follow-up. During a 2-year study,
91 patients were identified with indeterminate microcalcifications alone.
Specific roentgenographic features of the calcifications were evaluated on
initial and follow-up mammograms. During a mean follow-up of 36 months, 19
(21%) of the women exhibited mammographic changes. Ten patients (11%) with
suspicious changes underwent a needle-directed biopsy 6 to 30 months after
the initial mammographic screening. Five women (5.5%) were diagnosed as
having breast carcinoma; three had invasive ductal carcinoma and two had
purely intraductal lesions. Four patients had axillary lymph node
dissections and no metastatic disease was found. We found no significant
differences in the roentgenographic features associated with malignant vs
benign lesions apart from an increased overall estimation of the
probability of malignancy rating in the five patients with breast
carcinoma. We recommend that patients be followed up with mammography at
regular intervals for at least 18 months following recognition of
indeterminate microcalcifications.