I had been fibrocystic for years, and faithfully went for my yearly mammogram. When I was diagnosed the first time with breast cancer, it was after that yearly mammogram. They told me to go to a breast cancer surgeon. I chose the best in the area, and went in to see him. The intern working with him, insisted she was going doing needle biopsies on all the lumps. I told her no. We argued, and it got a bit loud, then my doctor came in. He and I talked. Eventually he got upset with her, and sent her out of the room, but I learned something. I already knew that with the ultrasound, CT scans, and PT scans, and MRI's the doctors can positively identify whether you have cancer, or not, and those tests are not so invasive, and far less traumatic. It's the insurance companies that demand the biopsy.
The insurance companies won't approve further testing, and treatment without the biopsy. I had 6 lumps. I gave him the option of doing 1 needle biopsy, after all they only need one positive biopsy to confirm, or doing all of them surgically, while I was asleep under anesthesia. He chose the latter, but it was scheduled as putting in my port. Insurance companies will approve to have a port put in, without the official diagnosis from the biopsy, but the insurance companies won't approve surgical biopsies as a lone procedure. He put in the port, and while he was in there, did some surgical biopsies. I never got a needle biopsy.