Overview
The Cancer Center’s Avon Foundation Comprehensive Breast Evaluation Center focuses exclusively on breast health and breast cancer detection. This program offers comprehensive, expert evaluation for:
- Breast lumps
- Abnormal mammograms
- Nipple discharge
- Other breast problems
- Male breast cancer
- Women at risk of breast cancer
Innovative Approaches
Because of our exclusive focus on breast health, we offer an expertise available at only a few other centers nationwide. Our entire team, including pathologists, radiologists, surgeons and nurses, specializes exclusively in diagnosing and treating breast disorders, particularly breast cancer, with the latest, most accurate and least invasive techniques available.
The Avon Foundation Comprehensive Breast Evaluation Center offers patients:
- The most advanced imaging technologies, such as digital mammography, digital tomosynthesis, and breast MRI
- Minimally-invasive surgical diagnostics, like fine needle aspiration, that extract the smallest amount of tissue necessary to make an accurate diagnosis
- Computerized breast cancer risk assessment in collaboration with the certified genetic counselors at the Cancer Center's Center for Cancer Risk Assessment.
Expertise in Diagnosing and Staging Cancers
Staging is the process of determining the extent or location of any cancer. Quick and accurate diagnosis and staging of cancer are key to defining an appropriate treatment plan. Each patient seen at the Avon Foundation Comprehensive Breast Evaluation Center receives a customized plan that incorporates diagnostic approaches most appropriate for their condition. This plan is developed and delivered by a team of experts who focus only on diagnosing and staging breast cancers, and who are skilled at evaluating the important features, such as molecular differences, of each patient’s tumor.
Many of our specialists are consulted from around the country and the world for their breast cancer pathology expertise. We use a full range of sophisticated imaging and surgical techniques to determine the location, stage and type of breast cancer. Among these procedures are:
- Digital mammography, a mammogram that uses x-ray detectors and computer assistance to create the image
- Computer aided detection (CAD), a technique in mammographic exams that identifies regions requiring further analysis
- Ultrasound, a noninvasive procedure that uses high-frequency sound waves to image an internal body structure
- Breast MRI, which uses a powerful magnetic field and computer assistance to produce detailed pictures of the breast and regional lymph nodes
- Digital tomosynthesis, which produces a 3-D image of the breast tissue
- Blood tests, chest X-rays, CT scans of the bones, abdomen or brain, PET imaging and MRIs of other parts of the body all may be used as part of the detection and diagnostic process
Excellence in Surgical Diagnostics
Your diagnostic plan may include a surgical procedure to determine if a lump seen in an image is cancerous, and if so, how far the cancer has advanced. Among the procedures we use are:
- Fine needle aspiration/biopsy, which involves a very thin needle inserted into the breast to withdraw a small amount of tissue for laboratory examination
- Stereotactic and ultrasound guided biopsies, in which surgeons use imaging technology to guide them during the biopsy
- Core biopsy, similar to fine needle biopsy, uses a slightly larger needle and is usually done under local anesthesia
- Needle-localized breast biopsies, in which the surgeon uses a tiny wire to remove a small amount of tissue from the breast area that looks abnormal on an x-ray
- Excisional biopsy, which removes the abnormal tissue and a margin of healthy tissue for examination by a pathologist
- Sentinel node biopsy, a technique to identify, remove and examine the single lymph node most likely to indicate whether cancer has spread beyond the breast
- Computerized risk assessment to determine risk of developing breast cancer
Learn more about our Breast Cancer Surgery Program.
Detecting Cancer Earlier through Research
Breast cancer detection research is focused on identifying and characterizing novel genes that are central to both normal development and cancer; this effort is designed to uncover new ways to determine risk and treatment of breast cancer. Women at high risk are followed closely with the latest imaging technology and offered risk reducing medications or surgical procedures as appropriate. In addition, our experts are engaged in ongoing research to refine and improve diagnostic techniques and to better determine the impact of treatment earlier.
In the News
How Boston Doctors Are Working to Get Breast Cancer Screening Results to Women Faster - NBC Boston 07/29/2021
A new program at Massachusetts General Hospital is dedicated to getting more women screened for breast cancer and getting them their test results faster. Watch the video from NBC Boston.
‘This is a godsend’: Doctors, spurred by the pandemic, try to make breast cancer screening easier and faster – The Boston Globe 07/10/2021
Mass General has began routinely offering patients mammogram results right away. This immediate-read program builds on another improvement Mass General has offered since 2017 at two imaging centers: same-day biopsies, or biopsies performed as soon as a follow-up test shows the need to examine a tissue sample for cancerous cells. Read more from The Boston Globe.
Clinical Trials
Many of the specialists and sub-specialists in our program are involved in research to improve the diagnosis and treatments for breast cancer. These studies include:
- Investigations to identify more ways to use MRI for women with prior breast cancer
- 3-D imaging of breast tissue using tomosynthesis
- Research to better understand the molecular features of individual breast cancers
- Identifying through genetic signatures which breast cancers will respond to hormone therapy
- Gene-expression profiling to identify which women are at higher risk of recurrence and therefore may benefit from more aggressive treatment
- Targeted therapies for tumors with genetic mutations identified through genotyping
Search our open protocols for breast cancer.