A coordinated private pathway for patients with a new breast lump, nipple change, focal pain, skin change, an abnormal previous scan or another breast concern. The package combines Consultant Breast Surgeon review, clinical examination, bilateral breast and axilla ultrasound, and mammography to provide a clear plan without unnecessary delay.
London Private Ultrasound’s One Stop Breast Clinic costs £949 and is designed primarily for patients with a breast symptom, particularly women aged 40 and over when clinical examination, bilateral breast and axilla ultrasound, and mammography are appropriate. A Consultant Breast Surgeon reviews the findings and explains the next step. Biopsy is not included and is charged separately only when clinically indicated.
Best forNew lump, nipple change, skin change, focal pain, axillary lump or abnormal previous imaging
Price£949 for the coordinated consultation, ultrasound and mammography pathway
IncludedBreast Surgeon review, clinical examination, both breasts and axillae ultrasound, and mammography
ReferralNo GP referral is required; patients can book directly
ResultsMain findings are discussed promptly; the formal ultrasound report is usually issued within 24 hours
LocationCoordinated through the Central London breast clinic near Harley Street
Everything Coordinated for You
What your £949 assessment includes
The One Stop Breast Clinic brings together clinical examination, specialist imaging and a practical next-step plan.
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Clinical and Imaging Assessment
Your symptoms and risk factors are considered alongside the breast examination and imaging findings.
✓ Consultation with a Consultant Breast Surgeon
✓ Detailed symptom, medical and family-history review
✓ Clinical breast and axillary examination
✓ Bilateral breast ultrasound
✓ Assessment of both axillae and visible lymph nodes
✓ Doppler evaluation where clinically appropriate
✓ Mammography within the coordinated pathway
✓
Clear Next Steps
The purpose of the clinic is to integrate the results and explain exactly what should happen next.
✓ Immediate discussion of the main clinical findings
✓ Formal written ultrasound report
✓ Review of mammography within the coordinated pathway
✓ Advice about surveillance or further imaging
✓ Referral planning for MRI, surgery or oncology if needed
✓ Biopsy pathway arranged when clinically indicated
Biopsy is not included in the £949 fee
Needle biopsy or aspiration is arranged only when clinically required and is subject to a separate fee, consent process and appointment pathway.
When to Book
Breast symptoms that need prompt assessment
Many breast changes are benign, but a new or persistent symptom should be assessed rather than monitored without clinical advice.
New Breast Lump
A palpable lump, thickening or area that feels different from the surrounding breast tissue.
Nipple Change
New inversion, persistent discharge, bleeding, crusting or a focal change around the nipple.
Skin or Shape Change
Dimpling, puckering, redness, swelling, contour change or a new difference between the breasts.
Persistent Focal Pain
Pain in one specific area, particularly when accompanied by a lump or visible change.
Axillary Lump
A new lump, swelling or persistent fullness in the armpit or upper outer breast.
Previous Abnormal Imaging
A mammogram, ultrasound or MRI finding requiring specialist explanation or further assessment.
Understanding Triple Assessment
How the three parts work together
Breast symptoms are assessed most effectively when the clinical examination and imaging are interpreted together. Tissue sampling is added only when the combined findings require it.
1
Clinical Examination
The Breast Surgeon reviews your symptoms, history and risk factors, then examines both breasts, nipples and axillary regions.
2
Breast Ultrasound
Ultrasound assesses the symptomatic area, both breasts and axillae, helping distinguish fluid-filled cysts from solid findings and evaluate lymph nodes.
3
Mammography
Mammography uses low-dose X-rays to assess breast tissue and can identify features such as masses, distortion or calcifications that may not be visible on ultrasound.
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Biopsy When Required
If examination or imaging is suspicious or indeterminate, a core biopsy or aspiration may be recommended. This is a separate procedure and fee.
Which Breast Appointment Do I Need?
Choose the most appropriate breast pathway
The One Stop Clinic is the most comprehensive symptomatic pathway. A simpler service may be suitable for focused imaging, reassurance or report review.
Triple assessment
One Stop Breast Clinic
£949
Best for a new or worrying symptom, particularly age 40+, when ultrasound, mammography and specialist examination are all appropriate.
The order of consultation and imaging may vary according to clinical need and appointment coordination.
1
Book the Clinic
Book online or call if you need help confirming that this pathway is suitable.
2
Specialist Review
Your symptoms, history, risk factors and previous reports are reviewed with a clinical examination.
3
Breast Imaging
Both breasts and axillae are scanned, with mammography coordinated when appropriate.
4
Integrated Findings
The clinical examination and imaging findings are considered together.
5
Next-Step Plan
You receive guidance about reassurance, surveillance, biopsy, MRI or treatment.
Consultant-Led Care
Your specialist breast clinic team
Breast Clinic Lead
Mr Debashis Ghosh
Consultant Breast Surgeon providing specialist consultation, clinical breast examination, imaging review and onward-care planning.
Consultant Breast Surgeon
GMC registered
Association of Breast Surgery member
Specialist review of imaging and biopsy requirements
Breast Imaging Team
Specialist Sonographers and Imaging Partners
The imaging pathway combines breast and axilla ultrasound with mammography coordination and clinical escalation where additional assessment is required.
Female sonographer available on request, subject to availability
Breast and axilla ultrasound included
Plain-English reporting and onward guidance
CQC-regulated clinical governance
Why Choose London Private Ultrasound?
A professional, regulated and patient-centred pathway
CQC
Regulated Clinical Care
London Private Ultrasound operates with CQC-regulated clinical governance, documented reporting and onward-referral processes.
MDT
Integrated Expertise
Breast imaging and Consultant Breast Surgeon assessment are coordinated so clinical and imaging findings are interpreted together.
♀
Privacy and Choice
A female sonographer can be requested at no additional charge, subject to appointment availability.
24h
Clear Reporting
Main ultrasound findings are explained during the visit where appropriate, with a plain-English report usually provided within 24 hours.
Central London Breast Clinic
27 Welbeck Street, London W1G 8EN
The One Stop Breast Clinic is coordinated through the Central London clinic in the Harley Street medical district. Your confirmation will explain the exact sequence and location of consultation, ultrasound and mammography.
Appointments available Monday–Sunday, 08:00–20:00
Near Bond Street and Oxford Circus stations
Direct private booking without a GP referral
Call 020 7101 3377 if you need help choosing the correct pathway
Bring previous breast images and reports whenever possible
Clinical content standard: This page explains the service and does not replace individual medical assessment. Final test selection and recommendations depend on age, symptoms, examination, pregnancy status, previous imaging and specialist judgement.
Before Your Appointment
How to prepare
1
Bring Previous Imaging
Bring or email previous mammogram, ultrasound, MRI or biopsy reports and images when available.
2
Avoid Deodorant
Before mammography, avoid deodorant, talcum powder, creams or lotions around the breasts and underarms.
3
Wear Two-Piece Clothing
A separate top and bottom can make changing for examination and imaging more convenient.
Age and clinical suitability matter
Mammography is particularly relevant for symptomatic women aged 40 and over. In younger patients, ultrasound may be the first imaging test, with mammography added according to symptoms, examination and specialist judgement.
Seek prompt medical advice for rapidly changing breast symptoms
Contact the clinic promptly for a new lump, bloody nipple discharge, marked skin dimpling, new nipple inversion, a rapidly enlarging breast, persistent redness or an axillary lump. Attend urgent care for severe infection symptoms, high fever, rapidly spreading redness, significant trauma or acute deterioration.
Detailed Patient Questions
One Stop Breast Clinic frequently asked questions
Clear answers about cost, triple assessment, age, mammography, biopsy, results, implants, pregnancy and booking.
A One Stop Breast Clinic is a coordinated symptomatic breast-assessment pathway that combines specialist clinical examination with appropriate breast imaging. At London Private Ultrasound, the £949 package includes Consultant Breast Surgeon review, bilateral breast and axilla ultrasound, and mammography. Biopsy is added separately only when clinically indicated.
The package price is £949. It includes Consultant Breast Surgeon consultation and examination, ultrasound of both breasts and both axillae, mammography within the coordinated pathway, and an integrated recommendation for next steps. Biopsy, aspiration, pathology, MRI or other additional procedures are not included unless explicitly stated.
The package includes a clinical history and breast examination by a Consultant Breast Surgeon, bilateral breast ultrasound with both axillae assessed, mammography where clinically appropriate, discussion of the findings and a formal ultrasound report. The sequence of the appointments may vary.
No. A core biopsy, fine-needle aspiration or cyst aspiration is arranged only when examination or imaging shows a finding that requires tissue or fluid sampling. It has a separate fee and consent process, and pathology results take additional time.
The clinic is designed as a coordinated single-visit pathway when scheduling and clinical suitability allow. Consultation, ultrasound and mammography may be completed on the same day, but biopsy, MRI, pathology or specialist treatment may require a separate appointment.
It is intended mainly for patients with a breast symptom such as a new lump, nipple discharge or inversion, skin dimpling, focal persistent pain, breast-shape change, an axillary lump or abnormal previous imaging. It is particularly useful for symptomatic women aged 40 and over when mammography is likely to be appropriate.
Yes, when symptoms or examination findings need specialist review. Ultrasound is commonly the first imaging test in younger women. Mammography is added according to the clinical concern, breast density, age and the Breast Surgeon’s judgement.
Yes. Symptomatic women aged 40 and over commonly benefit from combined clinical examination, ultrasound and mammography because the tests provide complementary information.
Men with a breast lump, nipple change, asymmetry, pain or another breast concern can be assessed. The most appropriate pathway may be a focused ultrasound plus specialist consultation rather than the standard mammography package, so calling the clinic before booking is recommended.
Yes, but tell the clinic before the appointment. Ultrasound is commonly the first imaging test during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Mammography can be performed when clinically necessary, but the final imaging plan should be decided by the clinical team.
The breasts and surrounding tissues can be assessed, but implant integrity questions may require a dedicated breast implant ultrasound or MRI pathway. Mammography technique is also modified for implants. Tell the clinic about your implants when booking.
The One Stop Breast Clinic is primarily a symptomatic diagnostic pathway. Patients without symptoms who want reassurance, family-history assessment or routine screening may be better suited to a breast ultrasound, mammography screening service or Breast Health Check package.
Triple assessment means clinical examination, breast imaging and tissue sampling when required. In this package, clinical examination, ultrasound and mammography are included. Biopsy is the third diagnostic component only when a suspicious or uncertain finding needs sampling, and it is charged separately.
Ultrasound uses sound waves and is useful for assessing a palpable area, differentiating cystic and solid findings, and evaluating the axilla. Mammography uses low-dose X-rays and can detect masses, architectural distortion and calcifications. The tests complement one another rather than replacing each other.
Yes. Mammography uses a low dose of ionising radiation and brief breast compression. The Breast Surgeon and imaging team consider age, symptoms, pregnancy status and previous imaging before recommending it.
The combined pathway provides a comprehensive initial assessment, but no examination or imaging test can guarantee exclusion of every cancer. Suspicious, discordant or uncertain findings may require biopsy, MRI, repeat imaging or specialist follow-up.
No. You can book directly without a GP referral. Bring any GP letter, previous breast report, mammogram images, ultrasound images, MRI or biopsy results because they may help the team compare findings and avoid unnecessary duplication.
Yes. A female sonographer can be requested at no additional charge, subject to availability. Make the request when booking so the team can offer the most suitable appointment.
Wear two-piece clothing and bring previous breast reports and images. If mammography is planned, avoid deodorant, talcum powder, creams or lotions around the breasts and underarms on the day because they can create artefacts.
Bring photo identification, a medication list, details of significant family history, previous breast clinic letters, mammogram or ultrasound images and reports, biopsy results, implant information and the dates of previous breast surgery or treatment.
The main clinical and ultrasound findings are usually discussed during the visit where appropriate. The formal ultrasound report is usually provided within 24 hours. Final conclusions may take longer when mammography comparison, biopsy, pathology or additional imaging is required.
The Breast Surgeon explains the level of concern and the recommended next step. This may include reassurance, short-term imaging follow-up, biopsy, MRI, surgical referral, oncology referral or review through an NHS or private breast unit.
Yes. The digital report can be shared with your GP, NHS breast unit, private consultant or overseas clinician. Ask the clinic if you need copies of relevant images or supporting documentation.
Bring the original images as well as the written reports whenever possible. The specialist can consider previous findings, but formal second-opinion interpretation may require access to diagnostic-quality images and may be subject to a separate process or fee.
Coverage depends on your insurer and policy. Contact the insurer before booking to confirm whether consultation, ultrasound and mammography are covered, whether pre-authorisation is required and whether the clinic or clinician must be recognised by the insurer.
The pathway is coordinated through London Private Ultrasound at 27 Welbeck Street, London W1G 8EN, in the Harley Street medical district. Check the booking confirmation for the exact timing and location of each component.
Use the secure booking calendar on this page or call 020 7101 3377. Explain your age, symptom, how long it has been present, whether you have implants, and whether you already have mammography or ultrasound results.
The £949 pathway includes Consultant Breast Surgeon review, bilateral breast and axilla ultrasound, and mammography. Biopsy is additional if required. Call 020 7101 3377 before booking if you are unsure whether this is the correct service.