Preoperative bone scans. Use in women with early breast cancer
N. D. Charkes, L. S. Malmud, T. Caswell, L. Goldman, J. Hall, V. Lauby, W. Lightfoot, W. Maier and G. Rosemond
Strontium nitrate Sr 87m bone scans were made preoperatively in a group of
women with suspected breast cancer, 35 of whom subsequently underwent
radical mastectomy. In 3 of the 35 (9%), the scans were abnormal despite
the absence of clinical or roentgenographic evidence of metastatic disease.
All three patients has extensive axillary lymph node involvement by tumor,
and went on to have additional bone metastases, from which one died.
Roentgenograms failed to detect the metastases in all three. Occult bone
metastases account in part for the failure of radical mastectomy to cure
some patients with breast cancer. It is recommended that all candidates for
radical mastectomy have a preoperative bone scan.