Handheld Radiofrequency Spectroscopy for Intraoperative Assessment of Surgical Margins During Breast-Conserving Surgery - CAM 701140

Description
As part of the treatment of localized breast cancer, breast-conserving surgery is optimally achieved by attaining tumor-free margins around the surgical resection site. Handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy for intraoperative assessment of surgical margins (e.g., MarginProbe) is intended to increase the probability that the surgeon will achieve clear margins in the initial procedure, thus avoiding the need for a second surgery to excise more breast tissue.

For individuals who have localized breast cancer or ductal carcinoma in situ undergoing breast-conserving surgery (lumpectomy) who receive handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy for intraoperative assessment of surgical margins (e.g., MarginProbe), the evidence includes a randomized trial, several historical control studies, and a systematic review. Relevant outcomes are change in disease status and morbid events. In the randomized trial, histologic examination of surgical margins was not used in the control arm; the outcome measure (complete surgical resection) was not directly clinically relevant and was biased against the control arm; and patient follow-up was insufficient to assess local recurrence rates. The difference in re-excision rates between the 2 trial arms was not statistically significant. Diagnostic characteristics of the device showed only moderate sensitivity and poor specificity; thus, the device will miss some cancers and provide frequent false-positive results. Although several historical control studies have shown lower re-excision rates among patients in whom MarginProbe was used, the studies lacked adequate rigor to demonstrate whether the outcomes are attributable to MarginProbe. The studies did not report recurrence outcomes, which is important for assessing adequacy of resection. A randomized trial that assesses recurrence rates is required to evaluate whether the net health outcome improves with handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy compared with standard intraoperative surgical margin evaluation, including histologic techniques. The evidence is insufficient to determine the effects of the technology on health outcomes.

Background
As part of the treatment of localized breast cancer, breast-conserving surgery is optimally achieved by attaining tumor-free margins around the surgical resection site. Failure to achieve clear margins will often require additional surgery to re-excise breast tissue. Currently, histologic examination of excised tissues after completion of surgery is the only method to determine definitively whether clear margins were achieved. Intraoperative methods of assessing surgical margins, such as specimen imaging, frozen section pathology, and touch print cytology, are either not highly accurate, not commonly available, or require considerable time and resources.

A device to detect positive margins should have a high sensitivity, indicating the ability to accurately detect any tumor found in the margins, ideally above 95%. While specificity is less important, excess false positive margin detection would lead to additional unnecessary tissue removal. A new device should have a specificity at least matching current standard best practices, estimated at 85%.1

The MarginProbe is an intraperative device that uses radiofrequency spectroscopy to measure the dielectric properties of tissue into which it comes in contact. Cancer cells and normal breast tissues produce different signals. A handheld probe is applied to a small area of the lumpectomy specimen and analyzes whether the tissue is likely malignant or benign. The device gives a positive or negative reading for each touch. If any touch on a particular margin gives a positive reading, the margin is considered to be positive and more tissue should be re-excised if possible. The device can only be used on the main lumpectomy specimen; it cannot be used on shavings or in the lumpectomy cavity of the patient’s breast. Use of MarginProbe is intended to increase the probability that the surgeon will achieve clear margins in the initial surgery, thus avoiding the need for a second procedure to excise more breast tissue.

Regulatory Status
In January 2013, MarginProbe® (Dune Medical Devices, Caesarea, Israel) was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration through the premarket approval process as an adjunctive diagnostic tool for identification of cancerous tissue at the margins (≤ 1 mm) of the main ex vivo lumpectomy specimen after primary excision. It is indicated for intraoperative use in conjunction with standard methods (e.g., intraoperative imaging and palpation) for patients undergoing lumpectomy for previously diagnosed breast cancer. Food and Drug Administration product code: OEE.

Policy 
Handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy for intraoperative assessment of surgical margins during breast-conserving surgery is investigational and/or unproven and therefore considered NOT MEDICALLY NECESSARY.

Policy Guidelines 
Please see the Codes table for details.

Benefit Application
BlueCard/National Account Issues 
State or federal mandates (e.g., Federal Employee Program) may dictate that certain U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved devices, drugs, or biologics may not be considered investigational, and thus these devices may be assessed only by their medical necessity. 

Rationale
Evidence reviews assess whether a medical test is clinically useful. A useful test provides information to make a clinical management decision that improves the net health outcome. That is, the balance of benefits and harms is better when the test is used to manage the condition than when another test or no test is used to manage the condition.

The first step in assessing a medical test is to formulate the clinical context and purpose of the test. The test must be technically reliable, clinically valid, and clinically useful for that purpose. Evidence reviews assess the evidence on whether a test is clinically valid and clinically useful. Technical reliability is outside the scope of these reviews, and credible information on technical reliability is available from other sources.

Handheld Radiofrequency for Breast Cancer Margin Detection
Clinical Context and Test Purpose

Breast cancer outcomes can be optimized by a thorough excision of breast cancer. A standard surgical practice of surgeons is to remove more breast tissue if pathologic examination of the initial excision shows positive margins. Handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy (for example, MarginProbe) evaluates the resected specimen to determine if further excision is necessary during the initial lumpectomy. The use of handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy should reduce re-excision rates, maintain low cancer recurrence rate, and minimize the volume of breast tissue excised.

The question addressed in this evidence review is: Does use of handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy (for example, MarginProbe) improve the net health outcomes for individuals undergoing lumpectomy for localized breast cancer or ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)?

The following PICO was used to select literature to inform this review

Populations
The relevant population of interest is patients with localized breast cancer or DCIS who are undergoing lumpectomy.

Interventions
The technology being considered is handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy (for example, MarginProbe) as an adjunct to standard assessment of margins.

Comparators
The following practice is currently being used: standard intraoperative assessment of margins such as inspection, palpation, intraoperative imaging, and intraoperative histologic examination. The technique used can vary by institution and surgeon. The incremental benefit of handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy (for example, MarginProbe) may vary according to what is considered the standard intraoperative assessment.

Outcomes
The short-term outcome of interest is the re-excision rate. However, the re-excision rate can only be considered a valid outcome if long-term outcomes (e.g., local recurrence rate, long-term cancer outcome) are either equivalent or in favor of handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy (e.g., MarginProbe). For example, if the use of handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy results in lower re-excision rates, but local cancer recurrence rates are higher, the adequacy of the initial treatment must be questioned.

A handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy is used during breast cancer surgery, with outcomes of interest including immediate re-excision rate and long-term recurrence and survival rates after cancer detection.

Study Selection Criteria
Methodologically credible studies were selected using the following principles:

  • Comparative controlled prospective trials were sought, with a preference for randomized controlled trials (RCTs).

  • In the absence of such trials, comparative observational studies were sought, with a preference for prospective studies.

  • To assess longer-term outcomes and adverse effects, single-arm studies that capture longer periods of follow-up and/or larger populations were sought.

  • Studies with duplicative or overlapping populations were excluded.

Clinically Valid
A test must detect the presence or absence of a condition, the risk of developing a condition in the future, or treatment response (beneficial or adverse).

Review of Evidence
Pivotal Trial

The evidence evaluating the efficacy of MarginProbe comes from the pivotal trial by Allweis et al. (2008) that led to device approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).3,4,5,6 The reviewed trial reported the most relevant patient outcomes available for evaluating MarginProbe with the largest number of patients, including a large proportion of U.S. patients. In addition to clinical outcomes, the trial permitted assessments of diagnostic test performance of MarginProbe, which will inform judgments of its utility.

The pivotal trial, MarginProbe, a Device for Intraoperative Assessment of Margin Status in Breast Conservation Surgery (NCT00749931) compared surgical processes and short-term outcomes in patients undergoing lumpectomies for nonpalpable breast malignancies whose excised tissue was and was not assessed using MarginProbe. In both arms, surgeons could use standard of care intraoperative methods such as palpation, specimen imaging, and gross and/or microscopic pathology assessments. The pivotal trial was a multicenter (21 sites) randomized study of 596 patients assigned equally to both treatment arms. Enrolled patients met criteria described in FDA labeling, but all also had nonpalpable lesions that required image-guided localization. Trial design was complex and included several steps in sequence in which additional shavings of breast tissue could be taken during the operation. The principal outcome of the trial was complete surgical resection, in which positive margins were either re-excised or specifically noted if not re-excised. It was not necessary for the re-excision to result in a clear margin. This outcome is not fully clinically relevant.

For the principal outcome, surgeries using MarginProbe had a rate of successful surgical excision of 71.8% versus 22.4% for controls, with positive margin subjects as the denominator. The large magnitude of difference was statistically significant. However, this outcome was biased against the control group and included nonclinically relevant events as outcomes, such as positive margins not resected. The volume of tissue resected, on both a relative and an absolute scale, was greater in the MarginProbe group, but the trial only presents conclusions of a noninferiority analysis without specifying the noninferiority margin.

More clinically relevant outcomes included the proportion of patients with positive margins on final pathology after surgery, which was 31% for the MarginProbe group and 42% for the control group (p = .008). Some patients with positive margins in the MarginProbe group did not have positive margins in their main specimen on final pathology. However, due to false-positive MarginProbe readings, additional shavings were taken, and cancer tissue was found at the margin. Without these additional shavings in response to MarginProbe assessment, these patients would not have been considered to have clear margins.

This occurrence reflects the uncertainty of final pathology in ascertaining whether all cancer tissue had been removed. The uncertainty complicated the comparison of outcomes between groups because a measure usually considered a poor outcome (e.g., positive margin), in this case, was not due to inadequate surgery but to inadvertent discovery of residual cancer due to false-positive MarginProbe readings.

Re-excision rates using all patients enrolled in the trial as the denominator showed about a 5% absolute reduction in the MarginProbe group (28.5% vs. 23.8%), which was not statistically significant. The decision to reoperate was based on surgeon judgment of patient and tumor characteristics and the totality of pathologic findings. The trial did not assess outcomes beyond the short-term re-excision rate; thus, it is unknown whether the lower re-excision rates resulted in at least equivalent local recurrence rates. Without knowing whether recurrence rate is at least equivalent, a lower re-excision rate could reflect inadequate initial surgery.

The trial also reported the diagnostic characteristics of MarginProbe. Of 1,788 margins with final histopathology, MarginProbe readings were valid or not missing in 1,750 samples. Three hundred twenty-seven margins were positive, and MarginProbe was positive in 246, for a sensitivity of 75%. Of 1,423 negative margins on final pathology, MarginProbe was negative in 660, for a specificity of 46%. These performance characteristics showing moderate sensitivity and poor specificity are consistent with better-than-random capability of the device in detecting positive margins. Given the 19% (327/1750) prevalence of positive margins, the positive predictive value of a positive MarginProbe test for a margin is 24%. In another analysis (performed or requested by the FDA) in which the location of the positive margin was ignored and the test was considered positive if any margin tested positive, MarginProbe was 96% sensitive but only 9% specific. Although this test performance characteristic is less clinically relevant, the low specificity in this trial indicates that MarginProbe was positive for at least 1 margin in almost every patient in the trial, even though the prevalence of at least 1 positive margin was 52%.

Geha et al. (2020) reported single-center results for the Columbia cohort (n = 46).7 Following conventional lumpectomy and intraoperative assessment, margins in 23 patients were additionally evaluated with MarginProbe. Data were collected until the earliest of the following events: 2 months after last surgery, conversion to mastectomy, or initiation of chemotherapy. The re-excision rate in the device group was significantly lower compared to control (4.3% vs. 34.8%; p = .022), The authors hypothesize that the device re-excision rate at their study site was lower than previously reported for the multicenter trial due to a higher number of patients with DCIS in the device group (30%) compared to control (8%) who were surgically managed with thicker tissue shavings in the case of device-reported margin involvement. Long-term excision and local recurrence rates were not reported for this cohort.

Systematic Reviews
A systematic review by Butler-Henderson et al. (2014) of techniques used for intraoperative assessment of margins in breast-conserving therapy for DCIS concluded that larger studies are needed to determine whether MarginProbe has a role to play in breast-conserving surgery.8 This conclusion was based on the pivotal trial previously reviewed and earlier studies.

A systematic review by St John et al. (2017) of intraoperative techniques to assess margins following breast conservation surgery identified 55 studies, 35 of which were included in a meta-analysis.9 The primary endpoint was diagnostic accuracy of the various techniques, which was based on pooled sensitivity, specificity, and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve. Reviewers found only 1 prospective study on MarginProbe, which was found to have a diagnostic accuracy of 68.2%, based in part on sensitivity (71.4%) and specificity (67.7%). Re-excision rates were a secondary outcome: of 57 patients in the MarginProbe study, 15.8% required re-excision during the initial surgery. The MarginProbe study was not included in the meta-analysis. Other intraoperative techniques included in the meta-analysis had pooled specificity ranging from 81% to 96%, depending on the modality, and pooled sensitivity ranging from 53% to 91%. The meta-analysis was limited by heterogeneity between studies in methodology and varying criteria for diagnosis and assessment of margins. A number of studies identified for the review could not be included in the meta-analysis because of missing raw data.

A systematic review by Gray et al. (2018) on intraoperative margin management in breast-conserving surgery identified 5 articles involving radiofrequency spectroscopy in a literature search conducted in July 2016.10 The evidence for MarginProbe showed a 70% specificity. Higher false-positive rates result in higher volumes of tissue removal. When the authors considered the improved positive margin detection balanced with the limited specificity, they concluded that the routine use of MarginProbe was not recommended (grade 2B recommendation).

Nonrandomized Studies
Thill et al. (2014) reported on final results of a 2011 cohort study of MarginProbe in patients with DCIS.11,12 Forty-two (76%) of 55 patients enrolled from the general screening population at 3 centers in Germany were eligible for analysis. Patients underwent preoperative wire localization followed by breast-conserving surgery, with intraoperative assessment of the excised specimen by MarginProbe, radiograph, and paraffin-embedded pathologic review. MarginProbe also was used on additional shavings. Outcome measures were re-excision rate compared with a historical control rate of 39% and “procedure success,” defined as (1) negative margins after breast-conserving surgery and (2) early identification of an extended lesion, with conversion to mastectomy rather than re-excision. Criteria for re-excision defined a negative margin of 5 mm. The historical cohort comprised 67 patients with DCIS who underwent breast-conserving surgery by the same surgeons involved in the study during the year before enrollment began. Because information about patient selection and baseline data were not provided for either cohort, it is unknown how comparable the 2 cohorts were. Re-excision rate was 17%, a statistically significant difference from the historical control rate (p = .018) with MarginProbe, and “procedure success” occurred in 24 (57%) of 42 patients. Sensitivity was 57% (95% confidence interval [CI], 48% to 66%) and specificity was 50% (95% CI, 42% to 58%). It is possible that the observed reduction in the re-excision rate was due to an increased incidence of mastectomies.

A retrospective, multicenter, before-after study by Sebastian et al. (2015) found a reduction in re-excision procedures from 26% to 10% after introduction of MarginProbe.13 Investigators reviewed case records of 4 surgeons in 3 centers who used individual (nonstandardized), routine lumpectomy methods including criteria for re-excision (186 cases before MarginProbe; 165 cases with MarginProbe). For each surgeon, re-excision rates using MarginProbe were compared with those from a historical set, comprising a consecutive series of cases shortly before each surgeon started using MarginProbe. With the device, there were 28 cases in which the margin on the main specimen was clear, but the corresponding shaving contained cancer. Three (1.8%) of 165 patients in the “after” group underwent mastectomy; the mastectomy rate in the “before” group was not reported. Performance characteristics (e.g., sensitivity, specificity) of MarginProbe cannot be calculated from these data. Other study limitations included lack of baseline description of the control (“before”) group, potential confounding by secular trends over time, and lack of recurrence outcomes.

A retrospective single-center study by Blohmer et al. (2016) compared the use of MarginProbe in 150 patients with a historical control group of 172 patients.14 The 2 groups had approximately similar proportions of patients with invasive breast cancer and DCIS. The historical control group underwent gross pathology examination and radiogram of the specimen as standard intraoperative procedures. The principal outcome of the study was re-excision rate. In patients for whom MarginProbe was used, the re-excision rate was 14.6%. In the historical control group, it was 29.7%.The study did not describe the criteria for re-excision or include long-term patient outcomes. The difference in the amount of breast tissue removed between strategies was also not reported.

A retrospective single-center study by Coble et al. (2017) compared the use of MarginProbe in 137 patients with a historical control group of 199 patients.15 The 2 groups had approximately similar demographic characteristics and proportions with invasive breast cancer and DCIS. The historical control group underwent standard lumpectomy followed by additional shavings taken circumferentially from all aspects of the cavity. The principal outcome of the study was re-excision rate. For procedures using MarginProbe, the re-excision rate was 6.6%. In the historical control group, the rate was 15.1%. The total volume of tissue (main specimen plus additional shavings) removed was also less in the MarginProbe cases (78 cm3 vs. 116 cm3; p = .002).

Kupstas et al. (2017) retrospectively reviewed charts of patients from a single center who were treated with MarginProbe during lumpectomy for invasive carcinoma and DCIS; 120 patients were intraoperatively assessed using standard of care, and 120 patients were intraoperatively assessed using the MarginProbe device.16 Reviewers found an improvement in the device group for the primary outcome, re-excision rate (9.2% of patients treated with MarginProbe required re-excision surgery vs. 18.2% of those treated with standard of care; p = .039). Included in this re-excision group were those who needed a second lumpectomy 5.8% (n = 7) of the device group versus 15% (n = 18) of the standard care group (p = .020). The study population differed in initial specimen volume. The device group was with significantly smaller breast volume on average (p = .032). It also differed in the number of shavings required, as those in the device group tended to receive 1.5 more shavings than their counterparts. The final mean volume of removed tissue was comparable between the device group (53.6 mL) and the standard of care group (53.5 mL; p = .974). A study limitation included the absence of long-term outcomes.

Gooch et al. (2019) retrospectively reviewed charts of patients (n = 341) from a single center who underwent breast-conserving surgery with the aid of the MarginProbe device during lumpectomy from 2013 to 2017 to elucidate the relationship between mammographic breast density and positive lumpectomy margins.17 A main lumpectomy specimen served as the index lesion assessed via the device. The final margin status was defined as the conclusion of the surgery, taking into account any additional margins excised after removal of the main specimen with the aid of the MarginProbe device. Mammographic breast density was not correlated with the likelihood of a final positive margin (p = .4564). Higher mammographic breast density was associated with younger age (p < .0001) and lower body mass index (p < .0001). The MarginProbe device identified 135 margin-positive main specimens. Final margins were positive in 34 (25.2%) patients and negative in 101 (74.8%) patients. The MarginProbe device identified 206 margin-negative main specimens. Final margins were positive in 17 (8.3%) and negative in 189 (91.7%) patients. These findings correspond to a sensitivity of 66.7% and a specificity of 65.2%. Positive margins on the main lumpectomy specimen were correlated with larger tumor size (p < .001), more advanced disease stage at diagnosis (p = .0247), the presence of a palpable mass (p = .0010), and an increased likelihood of subsequent re-excision (p = .0002). The overall re-excision rates were 11.3% and 8.0% for patients with BI-RADS category ratings of A-B or C-D, respectively.

A prospective single-center study by LeeVan et al. (2020) compared the use of MarginProbe for breast-conserving surgery in 60 patients with a historical control group.18 Intraoperative margin assessment was performed with a surgical standard operating procedure consisting of specimen radiography and gross pathological examination. Re-excision surgery was defined as a return to the operating table for a subsequent procedure. However, criteria for re-excision surgery were not provided. While 8 patients (13.3%) had a final close or positive margin on pathology following use of MarginProbe, only 4 patients consented to re-excision surgery, yielding a re-excision rate of 6.6%. Four patients declined re-excision in favor of whole breast irradiation. Although this result was statistically lower compared to the historical re-excision rate of 8.6% (p < .01), the authors concluded that this difference was not clinically meaningful. The sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, and positive predictive value for the use of MarginProbe were 67%, 60%, 16%, and 94% respectively, which was similar to standard protocol alone. Long-term outcomes and complete demographic characteristics for each group were not reported.

Cen et al. (2021) published a retrospective review of patients in a single center's institutional breast cancer database who received both neoadjuvant chemotherapy and breast-conserving surgery (N=61) between 2010 and 2018.19 Median patient age was 51.8 years and the study population had diverse representation (White 43%, Black or African American 17%, Hispanic 24%, and Asian 17%). A complete response was achieved for 19 (31.1%) patients. Of the remaining 42 patients, 9 (21%) had margins that required re-excision. While the use of MarginProbe was associated with a lower re-excision rate (6% vs. 31%, respectively), this difference was not statistically significant. Long-term outcomes were not reported.

Clinically Useful
A test is clinically useful if the use of the results informs management decisions that improve the net health outcome of care. The net health outcome can be improved if patients receive correct therapy, more effective therapy, or avoid unnecessary therapy or testing.

Direct Evidence
Direct evidence of clinical utility is provided by studies that have compared health outcomes for patients managed with and without the test. Because these are intervention studies, the preferred evidence would be from RCTs.

No evidence was identified supporting the long-term utility of MarginProbe when used to assess surgical margins during lumpectomy for localized breast cancer or DCIS.

Chain of Evidence
Indirect evidence on clinical utility rests on clinical validity. If the evidence is insufficient to demonstrate test performance, no inferences can be made about clinical utility.

Current evidence does not support the clinical validity of MarginProbe, hence a chain of evidence cannot be constructed.

Section Summary: Handheld Radiofrequency for Breast Cancer Margin Detection
Although the nonrandomized retrospective studies showed a reduction in re-excision rate when using MarginProbe compared with historical controls, they were not rigorously controlled. Moreover, re-excision rate is an intermediate outcome that is only valid if long-term patient outcomes (e.g., recurrence rate) are equivalent between MarginProbe and the alternative strategy. The single RCT comparing short-term outcomes for patients undergoing breast surgery for nonpalpable breast malignancies managed with and without MarginProbe reported no significant difference in re-excision rates between the 2 trial arms. In addition, both the sensitivity and specificity rates for the MarginProbe were lower than those for the current standard best practices.

Summary of Evidence
For individuals who have localized breast cancer or DCIS undergoing breast-conserving surgery (lumpectomy) who receive handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy for intraoperative assessment of surgical margins (e.g., MarginProbe), the evidence includes a randomized trial, several historical control studies, and a systematic review. Relevant outcomes are change in disease status and morbid events. In the randomized trial, histologic examination of surgical margins was not used in the control arm. The outcome measure (complete surgical resection) was not directly clinically relevant and was biased against the control arm, and patient follow-up was insufficient to assess local recurrence rates. The difference in re-excision rates between the 2 trial arms was not statistically significant. Diagnostic characteristics of the device showed only moderate sensitivity and poor specificity; thus, the device will miss some cancers and provide frequent false-positive results. Although several historical control studies have shown lower re-excision rates among patients in whom MarginProbe was used, the studies lacked adequate rigor to demonstrate whether the outcomes are attributable to MarginProbe. The studies did not report recurrence outcomes, which is important for assessing adequacy of resection. A randomized trial that assesses recurrence rates is required to evaluate whether the net health outcome improves with handheld radiofrequency spectroscopy compared with standard intraoperative surgical margin evaluation, including histologic techniques. The evidence is insufficient to determine that the technology results in an improvement in the net health outcome.

The purpose of the following information is to provide reference material. Inclusion does not imply endorsement or alignment with the evidence review conclusions.

Practice Guidelines and Position Statements
Guidelines or position statements will be considered for inclusion in Supplemental Information if they were issued by, or jointly by, a U.S. professional society, an international society with U.S. representation, or National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Priority will be given to guidelines that are informed by a systematic review, include strength of evidence ratings, and include a description of management of conflict of interest.

National Comprehensive Cancer Network
Current (v.2.2022 ) National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines for breast cancer do not include recommendations for intraoperative assessment of surgical margins using radiofrequency spectroscopy for ductal carcinoma in situ or invasive breast cancer.20

American Society of Breast Surgeons
In 2015, the most current version of the American Society of Breast Surgeons performance and practice guidelines for breast-conserving surgery mention that specimens should be submitted for margin assessment either intraoperatively or post-surgically, depending on each institution's protocol. A recommendation for a specific margin assessment method over another was not made.21

In 2017, the American Society of Breast Surgeons issued a consensus guideline for breast cancer lumpectomy margins, providing an algorithm for re-excision surgery after lumpectomy or breast conservation for invasive or in-situ breast cancer. Margin definitions and treatment recommendations are based on inked specimen edges and do not include recommendations for the intraoperative assessment of surgical margins via radiofrequency spectroscopy.22

U.S. Preventive Services Task Force Recommendations
Not applicable

Ongoing and Unpublished Clinical Trials
Some currently ongoing and unpublished trials that might impact this review are listed in Table 1.

Table 1. Summary of Key Trials

NCT No.

Trial Name

Planned Enrollment

Completion Date

Ongoing

 

 

 

NCT02406599a

MarginProbe® System U.S. Post-Approval Study Protocol CP-07-001

440

Nov 2021

NCT00625417

Optical Spectroscopy in Evaluating Tumor Margins in Patients Who Have Undergone Surgery for Breast Tumors

180

Nov 2023
(recruiting)

Unpublished

 

 

 

NCT02774785

Reducing Re-excisions After Breast-Conserving Surgery: A Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing the MarginProbe Device in Addition to Standard Operating Procedure Versus Standard Operating Procedure Alone in Preventing Re-excision

127

Feb 2021
(completed)

NCT: national clinical trial.
a Denotes industry-sponsored or cosponsored trial.
 

References  

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  20. National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN). NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Breast Cancer. Version.2.2022. https://www.nccn.org/professionals/physician_gls/pdf/breast.pdf. Accessed January 7, 2022.
  21. American Society of Breast Surgeons. Performance and Practice Guidelines for Breast-Conserving Surgery/Partial Mastectomy. 2015; https://www.breastsurgeons.org/statements/guidelines/PerformancePracticeGuidelines_Breast-ConservingSurgery-PartialMastectomy.pdf. Accessed January 7, 2022.
  22. American Society of Breast Surgeons. Consensus Guideline on Breast Cancer Lumpectomy Margins. 2017; https://www.breastsurgeons.org/docs/statements/Consensus-Guideline-on-Breast-Cancer-Lumpectomy-Margins.pdf. Accessed January 7, 2022.

Coding Section  

Codes

Number

Description

CPT

0546T 

Radiofrequency spectroscopy, real time, intraoperative margin assessment, at the time of partial mastectomy, with report

 

0694T (effective 01/01/2022) 

3-dimensional volumetric imaging and reconstruction of breast or axillary lymph node tissue, each excised specimen, 3-dimensional automatic specimen reorientation, interpretation and report, real\u0002time intraoperative 

HCPCS 

N/A 

 

ICD-10-CM

 

Investigational for all relevant diagnoses

ICD-10-PCS

 

ICD-10-PCS codes are only used for inpatient services. There is no specific ICD-10-PCS code for this imaging.

Type of Service 

Radiology

 

Place of Service 

Outpatient/ Professional

 

Procedure and diagnosis codes on Medical Policy documents are included only as a general reference tool for each policy. They may not be all inclusive. 

This medical policy was developed through consideration of peer-reviewed medical literature generally recognized by the relevant medical community, U.S. FDA approval status, nationally accepted standards of medical practice and accepted standards of medical practice in this community, Blue Cross Blue Shield Association technology assessment program (TEC) and other nonaffiliated technology evaluation centers, reference to federal regulations, other plan medical policies, and accredited national guidelines.

"Current Procedural Terminology © American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved" 

History From 2019 Forward     

07/07/2022

Annual review, no change to policy intent. Updating rationale and references.

11/23/2021 

Updating policy with 2022 coding. Adding code 0694T. No other change made 

07/01/2021 

Annual review, no change to policy intent. Updating rationale and references. 

07/21/2020 

Annual review, no change to policy intent. Updating guidelines, coding, rationale and references. 

07/22/2019

New Policy

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