Ultrasound-guided percutaneous aspiration for the treatment of breast abscess at a tertiary care center in the developing world

Shaista Afzal Saeed, Ahmad Bashir, Hania Shahzad, Imrana Masroor, Abida K. Sattar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

Abstract

Purpose: Percutaneous ultrasound (US)-guided aspiration is the first line of management for breast abscess. Our study aimed to look at the success of US-guided percutaneous drainage in managing breast abscesses at a tertiary care center and additionally to look for any correlation between US features and failure rate. Methods: A retrospective review of the radiology database at a tertiary care hospital in Pakistan was done to identify 54 patients through non-probability convenience sampling who underwent a US-guided percutaneous aspiration with laboratory confirmation of abscess. A treatment course was observed for the development of complications or failure of treatment. A chi-square test was performed to correlate US features and patient characteristics with outcomes of treatment (pResults: 75% of all women were successfully able to avoid surgery. Specifically, 80.6% of all lactating women and 66.7 % of non-lactating women with breast abscesses were successfully managed with US-guided percutaneous aspiration. Across a variety of parameters measured, including pathological and etiological factors, as well as features on imaging, no significant association was established between the variables and the failure of the intervention. Conclusion: Low morbidity and high patient satisfaction rates make percutaneous aspiration preferable to surgical intervention as a first-line treatment of breast abscess. Early use of antibiotics is recommended as an adjunct to drainage.

Original languageUndefined/Unknown
JournalDepartment of Radiology
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Oct 2022

Cite this