Affiliation:
1. Department of Breast Surgery Chris O'Brien Lifehouse Camperdown New South Wales Australia
2. Department of Surgery Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Camperdown New South Wales Australia
3. Department of Surgery The University of Sydney Camperdown New South Wales Australia
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundWire‐guided localization has been the mainstay of localization techniques for non‐palpable breast and axillary lesions prior to excision. Evidence is still growing for relatively newer localization technologies. This study evaluated the efficacy of the wireless localization technology, SCOUT®, for both breast and axillary surgery.MethodsData were extracted from a prospective database (2021–2023) of consecutive patients undergoing wide local excision, excisional biopsy, targeted axillary dissection, or axillary lymph node dissection with SCOUT at a high‐volume tertiary centre. Rates of successful reflector placement, intraoperative lesion localization, and reflector retrieval were evaluated. A survey of surgeon‐reported ease of lesion localization and reflector retrieval was also evaluated. Clinical trial registration: ACTRN386751.ResultsOne‐hundred‐ninety‐five reflectors were deployed in 172 patients. Median interval between deployment and surgery was 3 days (range 1–20) and mean distance from reflector to lesion was 3.2 mm (standard deviation, SD 3.1). Rate of successful localization and reflector retrieval was 100% for both breast and axillary procedures. Mean operating time was 65.8 min (SD 33). None of the reflectors migrated. No reflector deployment or localization‐related complications occurred. Ninety‐eight percent of surgeons were satisfied with ease of localization for the first half of cases.ConclusionSCOUT is an accurate and reliable method to localize and excise both breast and axillary lesions, and it may overcome some of the limitations of wire‐guided localization.