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Use of fiberoductoscopy for the management of patients with pathological nipple discharge: experience of a single center in Poland.

BACKGROUND: Pathological nipple discharge (PND) is associated with serious clinical and diagnostic issues. Fiberoductoscopy (FDS) is a new diagnostic option in PND patients. This study summarizes our initial experience of FDS for the management of PND patients in a single center in Poland and assesses its safety.

METHODS: A total of 256 women with PND were included in this prospective, case-controlled, single-center study between 2006 and 2014. Of the 250 patients who underwent FDS, 154 had mammary duct lesions and 96 had no visible lesions. Subsequently, 129 patients with lesions identified by FDS underwent microductectomy and the lesions were pathologically evaluated.

RESULTS: The mean duration of FDS examination was 17 min. The most frequent intraductal lesion was amputation of a duct (35.1%), followed by circular narrowing or hyperplasia (22.7%). Final histological findings were unremarkable in 11.6% of cases, whereas mammary duct papilloma, duct ectasia, and ductal carcinoma in situ were detected in 71.3, 10.9, and 6.2% of cases, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS: FDS is an innovative method for visualizing intraductal mammary lesions and allows accurate selection of mammary ducts with suspicious lesions that require surgical removal in women with PND.

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