| Dr.
Louis Barr with Surgical Specialists of Florida
Hospital was featured in the Orlando Sentinel
for his expertise and training in this procedure.
Read the full article here:
Radioactive
seeds offer hope in breast-cancer fight
The standard way of locating most breast
tumors involves threading a wire through a needle
to the site of a tumor. A new procedure uses
a radioactive seed about the size of a grain
of rice.

By Fernando Quintero, Orlando Sentinel
For Susan Wuerz of Winter Springs, the only
thing worse than worrying about whether she
had breast cancer were the tests.
The
standard way of locating most breast tumors
involves threading a wire through a needle to
the site of a tumor identified by a mammogram
or ultrasound. A surgeon later follows the wire
to the tumor and removes it.
In
the meantime, the patient is left with a wire
protruding from her breast.
"It
took the radiologist an hour and a half to get
the wire in. I felt it sticking against my chest
wall. It was very painful," Wuerz recalled.
Though
having the wire in her breast for two hours
while she awaited surgery wasn't painful, "it
was very uncomfortable," she said.
When
later tests showed another suspicious lump in
her breast, Wuerz almost decided against having
another biopsy. Then her doctor at Florida Hospital
Orlando told her about a new procedure called
radioactive-seed localization.
Florida
Hospital is one of the few facilities in the
state and across the country that uses a radioactive
seed about the size of a grain of rice implanted
in a woman's breast. A Geiger counter is used
to read the radioactive signal and guide the
surgeon to the tumor, which is removed along
with the seed.
A
2008 study by the Mayo Clinic, which developed
the procedure, showed seed localization more
accurately pinpoints the location of a tumor.
This means less healthy tissue is removed during
the lumpectomy, resulting in less disfigurement
to the breast.
Patients
can have the seed implanted as an outpatient
procedure up to five days before surgery. The
wire method has to be done the same day as the
surgery.
"That
allows more flexibility for both the surgeon
and the patient," said Dr. Louis Barr,
surgical oncologist at Florida Hospital Orlando
who performed the seed procedure on Wuerz.
Another
advantage of the seed procedure is that it reduces
"dirty margins," tumor tissues that
remain after surgery.
"You
want to remove as little tissue as needed, but
you also want to make sure you've removed the
tumor," Barr said.
Complete
removal is dependent upon having a rim of healthy
tissue — clear margins — surrounding
the cancer. If the margin is positive and the
cancer recurs, more surgery or a mastectomy
is often required.
In
the study by the Mayo Clinic — Barr was
trained in the seed procedure at the clinic's
Jacksonville location — 25 percent of
patients who underwent the wire procedure had
to have more surgery to remove leftover tumor
tissue. In the seed method, 8 percent of patients
returned to surgery.
"Our
study showed the seed was significantly better
at reducing trips to the operating room,"
said Dr. Sarah McLaughlin, a surgeon at Mayo
in Jacksonville who has performed the seed procedure
on patients there.
"From
a doctor's perspective, it is an approach that
should be more widely used," said McLaughlin.
"From a patient's point of view, it's more
convenient, more comfortable and cosmetically
better."
Dr.
Richard Gray, a surgical oncologist at Moffitt
Cancer Center in Tampa who devised the technique,
said it takes about the same amount of time
as the wire method but is easier for the surgeon
to use.
The
seed, a tiny titanium capsule, emits a level
of radiation less than that of a standard X-ray.
But it nonetheless involves the use of radioactive
material, which requires adherence to strict
state and federal handling guidelines.
Although
the seed technique is relatively new, it is
covered by most insurance plans. Wuerz said
Medicare covered the cost of her procedure.
Barr
sees seed localization as the future standard
for all breast lumpectomies. Wuerz, whose two
sisters have been diagnosed with breast cancer,
is on a mission to make it so.
"Because
of what my sisters and I have gone through,
I will probably become an activist," Wuerz
said. "The old procedure was so uncomfortable
it almost kept me from going back for more.
It's probably kept other women from getting
more treatment. I want other women to know they
have a good option."
Fernando
Quintero can be reached at fquintero@orlandosentinel.com
or 407-650-6333.
Copyright © 2010, Orlando
Sentinel
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