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Corel Medical Series: Cancer
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00071_Field_SRC.p05.A.4.txt
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1997-01-28
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loss of the breast. Whether to perform the surgery is up to the woman. Some women may feel more
comfortable avoiding surgery at an early stage and living with the risk. Others may feel otherwise.
• To diagnose or stage the disease Although many non-surgical techniques can diagnose cancer accurately,
in most cases it is still necessary for an oncologist planning therapy to have a sample of tissue to analyze. A
surgeon can remove a small amount of tissue by inserting a very fine needle into the area of the tumor and
drawing out a few cells to be examined under a microscope. This needle aspiration—or aspiration cytology—is
the easiest and most comfortable technique used to obtain sample cells, but the very small amount of tissue
involved may not be enough for an accurate diagnosis.
When more tissue is needed, a larger needle can obtain a "core" of tissue for microscopic examination. If that
sample is still not enough, a small operation—an incisional biopsy—may be performed to remove a portion of
the tumor. When the tumor is small, the surgeon might do an excisional biopsy, meaning that the entire lesion is
removed rather than just a sample of it. This is very common with skin lesions, where the doctor has to know
whether the lesion is a benign condition, malignant melanoma or some other skin cancer.
To stage the disease properly a more formal operation may be needed to obtain tissue from several areas of
the body. This is common with lymphomas, where a staging laparotomy—opening and examining the abdomen
may be required to remove sample tissues from the liver and lymph nodes and to remove the spleen .
It is important to remember that diagnostic surgery is just that—an operation designed merely to obtain
tissue to confirm a diagnosis or to help plan adequate treatment. The goal is not to cure the cancer.