Stereotactic biopsy

Tech. Sgt. Shirley Velez-Nicholas, 60th Medical Diagnostics and Therapeutics Squadron, performs an equipment check on the stereotactic biopsy table inside David Grant USAF Medical Center at Travis Air Force Base, Calif., March 1, 2018.
Vacuum-assisted biopsy probe (Mammotome) used in stereotactic biopsy of a breast mass.

Stereotactic biopsy, also known as stereotactic core biopsy, is a biopsy procedure that uses a computer and imaging performed in at least two planes to localize a target lesion (such as a tumor or microcalcifications in the breast) in three-dimensional space and guide the removal of tissue for examination by a pathologist under a microscope. Stereotactic core biopsy makes use of the underlying principle of parallax to determine the depth or "Z-dimension" of the target lesion.

Stereotactic core biopsy is extensively used by radiologists specializing in breast imaging to obtain tissue samples containing microcalcifications, which can be an early sign of breast cancer.