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1 43% (181 true-positive findings of 419 core-needle biopsies).
2 lected clinical specimens (for example, core needle biopsies).
3 mmogram and a target for stereotactic breast needle biopsy.
4 t as the one originally diagnosed with LN at needle biopsy.
5 cancer and a target for stereotactic breast needle biopsy.
6 kidney transplant is currently diagnosed by needle biopsy.
7 3 benign papillary lesions diagnosed at core-needle biopsy.
8 ed on tissue obtained with image-guided core-needle biopsy.
9 c findings at the time of lumpectomy or core-needle biopsy.
10 the morbidity and mortality associated with needle biopsy.
11 Two small cancers were completely removed at needle biopsy.
12 tients, open biopsy was performed after core-needle biopsy.
13 graft surgery was obtained by subepicardial needle biopsy.
14 of diagnostic techniques, particularly core needle biopsy.
15 as atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) by core needle biopsy.
16 the cellular resolution afforded by invasive needle biopsy.
17 thorax in patients undergoing CT-guided core needle biopsy.
18 hat would result in a recommendation of fine-needle biopsy.
19 reliability of diagnoses obtained with core-needle biopsy.
20 neumothorax after percutaneous transthoracic needle biopsy.
21 malignant changes in the vicinity of a core needle biopsy.
22 nucleic acid yields from imaging-guided core needle biopsy.
23 on of (68)Ga-PSMA PET/CT in conjunction with needle biopsy.
24 out metastatic disease and diagnosed by core needle biopsy.
25 To assess the complications of core-needle biopsy.
26 y were negatively correlated with receipt of needle biopsy.
27 redicated on the results of a patient's fine-needle biopsy.
28 kemia antigen CD34, coupled with a "magnetic needle" biopsy.
29 m 23 patients undergoing stereotactic breast needle biopsies.
30 l open biopsy, 44 kidneys in 31 patients had needle biopsies.
31 subpopulation of tissue specimens sampled by needle biopsies.
32 ility of this assay for analyzing small core needle biopsies.
33 n-and are therefore suitable for analysis of needle biopsies.
34 stic sampling as an attractive surrogate for needle biopsies.
35 umbers of viable cells when compared to core needle biopsies.
40 tic yield (71.5% [40/56]) compared with core-needle biopsy (50% [17/34] P = .04) and fine needle aspi
43 thermodilution blood flow measurements, and needle biopsies allowed the assessment of muscle oxygen
44 uided transsternal approach for coaxial core-needle biopsy allows safe access to masses in various lo
45 18 cell lines and 3 patient tumors from fine needle biopsies and assembled them with median coverages
48 easibility profile similar to that of single-needle biopsy and (b) an absence of serious adverse even
49 high-risk (for cancer) breast tissue at core-needle biopsy and had undergone subsequent surgery or fo
51 uracy of other interventions, including core-needle biopsy and needle-localized open surgical biopsy.
52 mputed tomographic (CT)-guided transthoracic needle biopsy and otherwise would have required chest tu
55 timate adipocyte size from an adipose tissue needle biopsy and routine quantitative real-time PCR mea
57 operative MR imaging combined with MR-guided needle biopsy and/or MR-guided lesion localization or br
58 generate 2 x 10(6) cells in 5 to 6 days from needle biopsies, and can generate cultures from cryopres
60 nal procedures such as radiation therapy and needle biopsy, and might help simplify the hardware of t
61 miles from a radiologic facility performing needle biopsy, and no mammogram within 60 days before co
62 f, starting with its diagnosis, reporting on needle biopsy, and reviewing how the most frequently use
63 ic findings, the histologic findings at core-needle biopsy, and the findings at subsequent surgical e
64 of US-guided FNA is similar to that of core needle biopsy, and there were no complications in this s
66 r Child Health study proposes a percutaneous needle biopsy approach to obtain postmortem samples, rat
68 cancers (Gleason pattern 3, G3) detected on needle biopsies are generally viewed as indolent and sui
70 and computed tomography-guided transthoracic needle biopsy are commonly used in patients undergoing b
71 ular fine-needle aspiration and percutaneous needle biopsy are feasible alternatives in selected grou
72 with pure LN of a low-risk type diagnosed at needle biopsy are strongly encouraged to undergo a yearl
73 Eight of 18 lesions diagnosed with automated needle biopsy as ADH were determined at surgery to be br
74 Nine of 55 lesions diagnosed with automated needle biopsy as DCIS were diagnosed as infiltrating duc
75 d OCM, which has the potential to guide core needle biopsies, assess surgical margins, and evaluate n
76 monary nodules and underwent a transthoracic needle biopsy at the interventional unit from January 1,
77 in human vastus lateralis muscle obtained by needle biopsy basally and after insulin infusion in four
78 n cases referred for excisional biopsy after needle biopsy because of atypia or discordance, final su
82 pared with the Gleason score (GS) after core needle biopsy (CNB) in patients with low, medium and hig
86 biopsies (FNAB) controlled with CT and core-needle biopsy (CNB) under real-time CT fluoroscopy guida
88 surgeries was 33.7% for patients undergoing needle biopsy compared with 69.6% for those who did not
95 cheduled for an initial or repeated prostate needle biopsy due to suspicious digital rectal examinati
96 However, despite stereotactic guidance, core needle biopsy fails to retrieve microcalcifications in u
97 findings in the surgical specimens when core-needle biopsy findings indicated malignancy or follicula
98 imaging-guided 9-gauge vacuum-assisted core-needle biopsy findings of 85 lesions in 75 patients aged
100 least one year; 76 (96.2%) had negative core-needle biopsy findings, and 74 (97.3%) of these remained
101 To determine the reliability of the core-needle biopsy findings, we compared the diagnosis from t
106 for spectroscopic validation of breast core needle biopsy for detection of microcalcifications that
108 tification of cancerous lesions that require needle biopsy for minimally invasive tissue sampling and
110 01 patients who underwent transthoracic core needle biopsy for the KEYNOTE-001 (MK-3475) clinical tri
111 xpression profiling was performed on 50 core needle biopsies from 18 breast cancer patients using Aff
114 at coexpress E-cadherin and vimentin in core-needle biopsies from patients with various advanced meta
115 chilles tendon by means of ultrasound-guided needle biopsies from the healing area of the Achilles te
116 els, human skeletal muscle cells obtained by needle biopsy from normal control subjects were grown in
117 om diagnostic tumor biopsies, including core-needle biopsies frozen in a non-viable format, to enable
119 of 110 patients (73.6%) in the transthoracic needle biopsy group (absolute difference, 5.4 percentage
123 grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia on needle biopsy has decreased to the point at which this a
124 aging and medical technology, CT-guided core needle biopsy has largely replaced fluoroscopic-guided f
125 s) are deadly paediatric brain tumours where needle biopsies help guide diagnosis and targeted therap
126 d ultrasound, physical examination, and fine needle biopsy if required to evaluate thyroid nodularity
127 and-guided CNB, image-guided vacuum assisted needle biopsy, image-guided fine needle aspiration, punc
128 e using 25-gauge vitrectomy as an adjunct to needle biopsy immediately before brachytherapy to minimi
131 specificity, and accuracy of US-guided core needle biopsy in differentiating benign from malignant l
132 nsitivity, specificity, and accuracy of core-needle biopsy in the detection of malignant neoplasms we
135 Background Percutaneous CT-guided lung core-needle biopsy is a frequently performed and generally sa
138 Conclusion Image-guided transthoracic core needle biopsy is an effective method for obtaining tissu
141 odel referenced in Kwak et al., wherein fine-needle biopsy is recommended for TIRADS 4A or higher.
146 d approach to tumor sampling, often invasive needle biopsy, is unable to fully capture the spatial st
148 tereotactic, 14-gauge, automated, large-core needle biopsy (LCNB) was performed in 483 consecutive no
151 earning model and test the performance on 44 needle biopsy material (110 slides) from a local annotat
153 tallic clips placed during stereotactic core-needle biopsy may differ substantially from the location
155 atic disease with the use of prognostic fine needle biopsy, Monosomy 3 a risk factor for metastatic d
162 ODS: From January, 2012 to May 2013, 76 core-needle biopsies of lung and mediastinum tumors were cond
163 ations were compared with measurements on 10 needle biopsies of normal liver and four tumor biopsies.
170 r can be normalized after prolonged culture, needle biopsies of vastus lateralis were obtained from 8
172 in recurrent disease is usually made by core needle biopsy of a single lesion, which may not represen
174 vances enabling computer-guided stereoscopic needle biopsy of calcified foci, histopathologic diagnos
175 US technique was used to identify and guide needle biopsy of enlarged supraclavicular lymph nodes (>
177 9.4%) would not make it safe to avoid a core needle biopsy of lesions that undergo contrast enhanceme
183 es that nuclear medicine guided stereotactic needle biopsy of the breast in patients with positive sc
188 ing the impact of invasive percutaneous core needle biopsy of the kidney allograft on diagnostic biom
189 Thirty-eight patients underwent percutaneous needle biopsy of the liver with chemical measurement of
191 ory-type material obtained by US-guided fine-needle biopsy of the pleural lesion were positive for My
193 ansrectal ultrasound guided systemic sextant needle biopsy of the prostate has been the procedure of
198 ankle dorsiflexion (ADF) and then obtained a needle biopsy of tibialis anterior (TA) to analyze splic
201 sk for breast cancer and should undergo core-needle biopsy or needle localization with surgical biops
204 5% CI, 1.04 to 4.13) and completion of first needle biopsy (OR, 3.02; 95% CI, 1.76 to 5.18) were asso
207 in diagnostic techniques, specifically core needle biopsies performed under mammographic and ultraso
208 adiographs of the specimens obtained at core needle biopsy performed through the region of color leve
209 in the relative utilization of percutaneous needle biopsy (PNB) and imaging-guided percutaneous biop
211 fers a versatile, noninvasive alternative to needle biopsy procedures for the diagnosis or surveillan
212 tereotactic- and ultrasonography-guided core-needle biopsy procedures seem to be almost as accurate a
214 ted in patients who present with palpable or needle biopsy-proven axillary metastases, patients with
222 on was detectable for all genes in malignant needle biopsy samples (AUC: 0.80 to 0.98), confirming pr
223 ein synthesis in human skeletal muscle using needle biopsy samples and applied this technique to eluc
224 ained to detect and grade cancer in prostate needle biopsy samples at a ranking comparable to that of
226 r regular quantification of steroids in core needle biopsy samples of breast tissue to inform dosage
227 gs were compared with histopathology of core needle biopsy samples or with ultrasound follow-up data
228 ole sections, paired surgical resection/core needle biopsy samples, and paired samples from 69 patien
231 may facilitate the analysis of miRNA in fine-needle-biopsy samples and even in single cells without e
232 echniques include stereotactic 14-gauge core-needle biopsy (SC bx), stereotactic 11-gauge suction-ass
233 ed the differences between stereotactic core needle biopsy (SCNBx) and needle localization surgical b
234 ctal hyperplasia diagnosed with percutaneous needle biopsy should be managed with surgical excision.
235 apillary lesions diagnosed as benign at core-needle biopsy should be surgically excised because a sub
237 gnostic purposes involving preoperative fine-needle biopsy specimens as well as to define targetable
238 n of AMACR protein expression in 94 prostate needle biopsy specimens demonstrated 97% sensitivity and
240 xpression profile analysis of formalin-fixed needle biopsy specimens from the livers of 216 patients
241 erial tissue sections from paraffin-embedded needle biopsy specimens obtained at approximately 1 hr o
242 tion, PDGFRalpha expression in pre-operative needle biopsy specimens predicted poor overall survival
244 be useful in the interpretation of prostate needle biopsy specimens that are diagnostically challeng
245 chain reaction evidence of JCV infection in needle biopsy specimens with and without viral nephropat
246 Formalin-fixed human breast cancer core-needle biopsy specimens, were embedded, lipid-cleared, a
251 y with which florid duct lesions are seen in needle-biopsy specimens of the liver was assessed in pat
253 s, pairing RNA samples from control prostate needle biopsy taken before intervention to RNA from the
254 When directly compared with the traditional needle biopsy technique, NMR was found to be more precis
256 for severe complications is lower with core-needle biopsy than with open surgical procedures (<1% vs
257 allow for the identification of G3 tumors on needle biopsies that are truly indolent versus those tha
258 t lesions (HRLs) diagnosed with image-guided needle biopsy that require surgical excision to be disti
259 esions entirely removed at percutaneous core needle biopsy that required wider excision underwent fre
260 rmed by computed tomography (CT)-guided core needle biopsy that was performed 2-4 weeks before cryoab
262 tomography (CT)-guided coaxial transthoracic needle biopsy, the authors fashioned an 18-gauge experim
263 plications, the probability of nondiagnostic needle biopsy, the sensitivity of computed tomography, a
264 grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia on needle biopsy--the most common precursor lesion to prost
265 hrough 4, among the 6706 men who underwent a needle biopsy, there were 220 tumors with a Gleason scor
266 tissue sites from fresh stereotactic breast needle biopsy tissue cores from 33 patients, including 5
270 , as well as measurements of tumor volume on needle biopsy to enhance the prediction in men undergoin
273 he great increase in the utilization of core needle biopsies under mammographic and ultrasonographic
274 g the contribution of a patient's surgeon to needle biopsy use, and knowledge regarding downstream im
275 g nucleic acid yields in CT-guided lung core needle biopsies used for genomic analysis, there should
276 hat CNA burden can be measured in diagnostic needle biopsies using low-input whole-genome sequencing,
277 from patients undergoing stereotactic breast needle biopsy, using a compact clinical Raman system.
280 10 cases, an ultrasound-guided percutaneous needle biopsy was attempted on a protocol basis 10 days
283 aphy, fine-needle aspiration biopsy, or core-needle biopsy was performed before a definitive diagnosi
285 992 through February 1995, stereotactic core needle biopsy was performed in 356 women with 405 nonpal
290 reast cancer was initially diagnosed by core-needle biopsy were more likely than women with cancer in
291 based on histological evaluation of prostate needle biopsies, which have high false negative rates.
292 1780 women with diagnosis of primary DCIS on needle biopsy who were alive and free of invasive breast
296 eve that biopsy procedures - especially core needle biopsies - with CEUS assistance are potent tools
297 io (HR) of 3.0 (95% CI, 2-4.5) and, via core needle biopsy, with an adjusted HR of 2.2 (95% CI, 1.5-3
298 s author does not recommend a routine repeat needle biopsy within the first year following the diagno
299 sultation before versus after biopsy, use of needle biopsy (yes or no), and number of surgeries for c