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A Single-Institution Comparative Analysis of Bracketed Localization for Partial Mastectomy Using Traditional Wire and Wireless Methods.

Created on 06 Jul 2026

Authors

Olivia W Galloway, Ashley Wilbers, Omolade O Sogade, Ariana Naaseh, Ami Trivedi, Justin Dumrongkulraksa, Jade Tao, Jingqin Luo, Arianna Buckley, Julie A Margenthaler

Published in

Annals of surgical oncology. Jul 06, 2026. Epub Jul 06, 2026.

Abstract

The use of multiple wires or wireless seeds to bracket large areas of breast lesions is an effective way to avoid mastectomy in patients. However, direct comparisons between wire and wireless bracketed localization are not well studied. We aimed to compare wireless and wire bracketed localization and identify factors associated with positive or close margins.
Patients undergoing bracketed localization for malignancy from 2019 to 2024 were identified. Data collected included demographics, radiographic features, pathology, and margin status. Patients with benign pathology and those undergoing oncoplastic surgery were excluded. Characteristics were compared between patient groups by localization type and margin status.
In total, 240 patients were identified. Of these, 175 (72.9%) underwent wire bracketed localization and 65 (27.1%) underwent wireless bracketed localization. There were no significant differences in final margin status, distance from the closest margin, or need for additional surgery. A total of 66 patients (28.5% of wire bracketed localization and 24.6% of wireless bracketed localization) had close or positive margins, which was associated with size of disease, grade, atypical ductal hyperplasia on core biopsy, ductal carcinoma in situ or invasive lobular carcinoma on final pathology, number of biopsy sites, and a lack of discrete mass or calcifications on imaging.
In this large single-institution study, wireless and wire bracketed localization had similar final margin status. Although we could not control completely for selection bias between methods, we were able to demonstrate factors associated with positive or close margins to determine scenarios in which wider margins or additional surgery may be necessary.

PMID:
42406214
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 06 Jul 2026.

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