Titanium Marker and Radioactive Seed Implant Before Lumpectomy

Options
Mstein1970
Mstein1970 Member Posts: 48

During a core needle biopsy, I had a titanium clip implanted at the site of a small cancerous tumor, to show doctors the tumor's location during subsequent procedures. This week I'm having a lumpectomy, and the day before that surgery, they're implanting a radioactive seed to show the surgeon the location of the tumor.

I don't understand why the titanium marker and the radioactive seed are both needed, and I haven't gotten a clear answer to this question. Of course I'd rather not have a radioactive seed implanted if it's not necessary.

Does anyone understand why they're marking the tumor site twice?

Comments

  • BarredOwl
    BarredOwl Member Posts: 2,433
    edited November 2016

    Hi Mstein1970:

    The titanium clip is inert. It can be visualized by mammography and can be seen in a surgically removed sample, but it cannot provide a detectable physical signpost during surgery.

    To locate a non-palpable tumor during the surgical procedure, surgeons use "wire-guided localization" or radioactive seed placement.

    Even though I had clips placed during various biopsies, prior to surgical biopsy (essentially a lumpectomy), they used a mammogram to visualize the area of concern, and inserted wires so the wires marked the area to be removed later by the surgeon ("wire-guided localization").

    Radioactive seed placement is an alternative to the wire-guided method I had, in which radioactivity from the seed is used to localize a non-palpable tumor. Accurate localization of the tumor is important to achieving clean margins, and hopefully avoiding the need for a further procedure(s) ("re-excision" or "resection") to obtain clean margins. I found this explanation in laymen's terms:

    http://www.nebraskamed.com/article/65/radioactive-...

    BarredOwl

  • Mstein1970
    Mstein1970 Member Posts: 48
    edited November 2016

    Thank you, BarredOwl.

  • Irony
    Irony Member Posts: 46
    edited December 2016

    mstein1970, My experience was similar, but different.

    Let me explain: I had the titanium clip placed during the biopsy. Then a few days before surgery I went in and they numbed me and injected a RADIO FREQUENCY marker called a Savi Scout. It was not radioactive.

    The way it works is that the day of the surgery, instead of having to do a traditional wire localization where you would go to the radiology dept and they would place a wire into the mass that sticks out of the breast so the surgeon can locate the titanium clip, they will use this wand that will pick up the radio frequency marker they put in. You avoid having the wire localization that can be stressful and painful.

    It worked like a charm for me. If this is similar to what you are having, it is great. I am a breast ultrasound tech and have assisted many wire localizations. You get to avoid that! I love advances in technology. Just verify with your doctor whether it is radioactive or radiofrequency.

    Best of luck.

  • Siciliana
    Siciliana Member Posts: 127
    edited December 2016

    I was just diagnosed with breast CA and on the path report from the core needle biopsy, I see a notation that "This finding is amenable to Savi scout localization." From what I am reading of this new technology, I sure hope I can have it done. I love the idea of them being able to quickly locate the mass and more accurately resect the diseased tissue.

Categories