Title: The Breast: an Overview
1The Breast an Overview
- Lisa S. Dresner, MD, FACS
- Associate Professor of Surgery
- SUNY Downstate
2Prevalence/Incidence
- 200,000 new cases in USA / year
- Incidence
- 121 / 100,000 white women
- 99 / 100,000 black women
- Stage
- Increased numbers of early and non-invasive
cancers - Stable or slightly decreased number of advanced
- Rates vary geographically and ethnically
- Rates vary greatly by age
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4Risk of Breast Cancer
Current age 10 yrs 20 yrs 30 yrs Eventually
0 0.00 0.00 0.05 13.22
10 0.00 0.05 0.48 13.37
20 0.05 0.48 1.92 13.40
30 0.44 1.88 4.49 13.41
40 1.46 4.11 7.56 13.14
50 2.73 6.30 9.64 12.06
60 3.82 7.40 9.52 9.99
Lifetime risk of dx 13.22 Lifetime risk of
dying 2.96
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6Anatomy
7Anatomy
8Structural Anatomy
9Physiology
- Cell Regulation
- Growth development and function under hormone
control - Binding of hormone to specific cell receptors
trigger effects - Estrogens
- important in development, growth and
differentiation. Normal and most malignant
breast cells contain ER receptors. - E-ER complex binds with nuclear chromatin and
influences protein production including
progesterone receptor (PR)
10History
- Complaint, ask about SBE
- Timing and nature of previous breast surgery
(atypia, cancer etc) - Family history of breast or ovarian cancer
- Use of hormones
- Reproductive history
- Radiation exposure
11Physical Exam
- Best/easiest during week after menses
- Palpate supraclavicular, cervical and axillary
nodes - Skin changes dimpling, edema, nipple change
- With patient supine with hand over head examine
breast in a systematic way against the chest wall
12Evaluation of Breast Mass
- In women under 30 ultrasound
- In women over 30 mammoultrasound
- As a rule all except obviously benign masses
should have pathological diagnosis - Open biopsy
- Core biopsy
- FNA
- Ultrasound guided core biopsy (highly sensitive
and specific) - If the mass is indeterminate by your exam
consider ultrasound to confirm - If mass not palpable stereotactic core biopsy
13Ultrasound guided biopsy
14Screening
- No controversy all women aged 50 and older
should have a mammogram every 1-2 years as well
as an annual clinical breast exam (CBE) - Women 40-50 guidelines ACS mammogram every 1-2
years as well as an annual clinical breast exam
(CBE) - High Risk earlier mammography.
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16Mammogram ACR Classification
Standardized way of reporting mammogram results.
BioRads Assessment BioRads Assessment
Category 0 Needs Additional Imaging Evaluation
Category 1 Negative (5/10,000 risk of breast cancer)
Category 2 Benign Finding (5/10,000 risk of breast cancer)
Category 3 Probably Benign Finding Short Interval Follow up Suggested (generally 6 months)
Category 4 Suspicious Abnormality-Biopsy Should be considered (risk cancer 25-50)
Category 5 Highly suggestive of malignancy- Appropriate Action should be taken (obvious cancer 75-100risk)
17Masses
Round
Circumscribed
Microlobulated
Oval
Obscured
Lobulated
Ill-defined
Irregular
Spiculated
18Infiltrating Carcinoma
19Microcalcifications Concerning
20Microcalcs Benign
21Cluster of irregular microcalcs.
22Management of Non-Palpable Mammographic
abnormalities
- Ultrasound is there a mass?
- Ultrasound guided core biopsy may be diagnostic
- Stereotactic core biopsy
- Mammographic abnormalities
- Mammotome (mammo-guided very big core may be
excisional) - Needle localization biopsy
- Mammo or ultrasound guided open biopsy
- Cryoablation for bx proven benign
23MRI for evaluation of the breast
- Highly sensative but high false postive rate
- Useful for screening BRCA patients
- May be useful in staging known breast cancer
- May become an important screening modality
24Stereotactic core biopsy
25Other imaging modalities
- Tc99m sestamibi scan (Miraluma)
- Tomosynthesis (variation of mammogram)
26MRI
- Extremely sensitive (?high false positives?)
- May be useful in staging
- May be useful in high risk patients with
difficult mammograms - Not yet approved for screening
27Benign Breast Disorders 1
- Fibrocystic disease
- Nodular, lumpy, tender breasts
- Mastodynia
- Clear/milky nipple discharge
- Within the range of normal
- Confirm benign-ness, Reassurance, symptomatic
relief. Encourage BSE - Fibrocystic features
- Adenosis, cysts, fibrosis (not increased risk)
- Ductal and lobular hyperplasia with or without
atypia (with increased risk)
28Breast cysts
- A palpable mass could be a cyst
- Simple cysts need no treatment
- Needle aspiration to confirm, or for pain relief
- Ultrasound (conclusive)
- Complex cysts, bloody cysts deserve evaluation
and biopsy (open or ultrasound guided core) - Excision if diagnosis is in doubt after minimal
invasive biopsy
29Breast cyst
30Fibroadenoma
- May present at any age but most common women
16-24. - Rubbery, mobile, well defined
- Confirm by core, excision, FNA, or ultrasound,
and/or short interval observation by ultrasound - Giant fibroadenomas may be very large and grow
rapidly (late teens and perimenopause) RX
enucleation - Actual pathology may be adenoma, fibroadenoma,etc
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32Phylloides Tumor
- Old name cystosarcoma phylloides
- Mesenchymal tumor leaf like masses, cellular
with necrosis and hemorrhage - May occur in adolescent (generally benign) or
premenopausal woman (may be malignant) - Treated with excision with margins
- 25 risk of local recurrence in 10 years even
with benign path - Mitotic figure count is one predictor of
malignancy - Metastasis even in malignant tumors are rare
- Younger more likely benign, older women more
likely malignant
33Phylloides tumor
34Other benign breast masses
- Sclerosing adenosis
- Radial scar
- Fat necrosis
- Ductal ectasia
- Lactational mastitis and galactocele
- Mondors disease
- Intraductal papilloma
- Lactating adenoma
35Mastodynia
- Cyclical or continuous. May be referred to
axilla, upper arm, may improve with menopause - Rarely associated with malignancy
- Continuous may be related to a large
cyst,infection or inflammation - Reassurance, NSAIDS, well fitted brassiere,
caffeine reduction, evening primrose oil,
cessation of tobacco use (takes months) - Danazol, bromocriptine and tamoxifen (side
effects prohibitive) - ?SSRI
36Nipple Discharge
- Most common after lactation (as long as 2 years)
- Subareolar infection (increased risk in smokers)
- Galactorrhea (bilateral, milky) prolactin excess
- Fibrocystic green, yellow, brown (guiac)
- Bloody intraductal papilloma (benign), Cancer
should be ruled out. Ductogram (galactogram) may
be helpful
37Hyperplasias not malignant but not really
benign either
- Ductal hyperplasias
- Mild
- Moderate
- Florid
- Atypical Ductal hyperplasia (ADH)
- (Ductal carcinoma in-situ- DCIS)
- Lobular hyperplasias
- Lobular hyperplasia
- Lobular carcinoma in-situ
38Lobular Carcinoma In-situ LCIS
- Bystander lesion- marker of risk
- Commonly occurs in 4th decade of life, 2/3 are
premenopausal - Lobular tumors are more likely ER/PR positive
- Diagnosis incidental on biopsy of other pathology
- Significant life time risk of breast cancer (5.9
to 12 times higher) but the risk is in both
breasts - Risk is greater 15-20 years after diagnosis than
the immediate post diagnostic period
39Lobular Carcinoma
- Clinical features, epidemiology and risk factors
and treatment not different - Doesnt form microcalcifications and is
extensively infiltrative so may be
mammographically occult - May present as architectural distortion on
mamography
40Invasive Ductal Carcinoma
- Most common tumor from ductal elements
- Invasion of nerves, vessels, lymphatics in the
breast parenchyma at edge of lesions may be
present and carries a poorer prognosis - May have all or partial characteristics of other
types (colloid, tubular, medullary)
41Breast Cancer
42Breast Cancer Risk Factors
- Greatly increased risk RRgt4.0
- Inherited genetic mutations for breast cancer
- 2 first degree relatives with breast cancer
diagnosed at early age - Personal history of breast cancer
- Age gt65 (increasing risk with increasing age to
80)
43Breast Cancer Risk Factors
- Moderately increased risk factors RR 2.1-4.0
- One first degree relative with breast cancer
- Nodular densities on mammogram (gt75 of volume)
- Atypical hyperplasia on breast biopsy
- High dose ionizing radiation to chest
44Breast Cancer Risk Factors 3
- Low increased risk RR 1.1-2
- High socioeconomic status, urban residence,
Northern USA - Early menarche (lt12), late menopause (gt55)
- No full term pregnancy, late (gt30) first term
pregnancy - Never breast fed
- Postmenopausal obesity
- Etoh,consumption
- HRT, recent oca use
- Tall
- Personal history of ca endometrium, ovary or
colon - Jewish heritage, mammographically dense breasts
45Inherited Breast Cancer Syndromes
- 1. Li-Fraumeni syndrome p53 mutation
- 2. Mutation on the sht arm of chromosome 2
- 3. BRCA-1 long arm chromosome 17 (associated with
breast and ovarian cancer) - 4. BRCA-2 small region of 13q12-13
- Recommendations vary from bilateral
salpingo-oophorectomy and prophylactic
mastectomy to increased surveillance - Value of SERM (tamoxifen) unclear as most
hereditary-linked breast cancers are ER/PR
negative
46Estimating Risk
- Gail Model
- calculates risk using 6 key risk factors
- Age
- Age menarche
- Age first birth
- Family history (1 female relative)
- Number of previous breast biopsies
- Number of biopsies with atypical hyperplasia
- http//bcra.nci.nih.gov/brc/
47Inflammatory breast cancer
- Diagnosis clinical findings of inflamed breast
with underlying malignancy. - 35 have obvious mets at time of diagnosis
- Mammogram edema
- Dermal or core biopsy
- Treatment is neoadjuvant chemotherapy first then
mastectomy plus RT
48Inflammatory Breast Cancer
49Inflammatory Breast Cancer
50Staging
- Primary tumor
- Tis Carcinoma in-situ
- T1 2 cm or less
- T2 gt2 but not more than 5 cm
- T3 gt5 cm
- T4 any size with chest wall extension, skin
involvement, skin nodules, or inflammatory breast
cancer
51Staging
- Nodes
- N0 no involved nodes
- N1 mets to ipsilateral nodes (movable)
- N2 mets to ipsilateral nodes matted/fixed
- N3 ipsilateral internal mammary nodes
- Metastasis
- M0, M1
52Stage Groups
- Stage 0 Tis, N0, M0
- Stage 1 T1, N0, M0
- Stage IIA T0-1, N1,M0
- T2 , N0, M0
- Stage IIB T2, N1, M0
- T3, N0, M0
- Stage IIIA T0-2, N2, M0
- T3, N1-2, M0
- Stage IIIB T4, N1-2, M0
- Any T, N3, M0
- Stage IV Any T, Any N, M1
53Tumor related prognostic factors
- Size
- ER and PR status
- Margins
- Histologic type
- Pathologic prognostic features
- Nuclear grade, angiolymphatic invasion,
lymphocytic response - Invasivion DCIS vs infiltrating intraductal I
- invasion of basement membrane
- Often both on same specimen
54Breast CancerTreatment Options
- Local control
- Lumpectomy with irradiation
- Mastectomy reconstruction
- Regional Control
- Axillary lymph node dissection
- Regional RT
55Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy
- Recommended for Stage IV, and some III and IIb
patients - May allow breast conservation therapy in women by
downstaging tumor. - Unclear yet that it improves survival but good
response is a good prognostic sign
56Sentinal node biopsy
- New standard for clinically negative axilla
- Avoids full axillary dissection and its
complications in patients with small tumors and
negative node status - blue dye plus nuclear medicine
- Axillary node evaluation done to identify node
positive patients so as to guide adjuvant therapy
- Proven benefit in women with T1 tumors (where
axillary node infrequently involved)
57Breast Conservation
- Quality of results improved by increasing
facility with autologous flaps and use of tissue
expanders - Improved quality of result with advent of skin
sparing mastectomy - Options include flaps (Tram, latissimus), free
flaps, and implants.
58Skin sparing mastectomy
59Adjuvant therapy
- Chemotherapy
- Decreases rate of distant recurrence
- Recommended for stage stage II breast cancers
- Hormonal therapy
- Effect in ER/PR positive breast cancers similar
to chemotherapy - New agents (aromatase inhibitors) may supplant
Tamoxifen in the next few years in post
menopausal patients
60Adjuvant Therapy
61On the horizon
- Ductal Lavage and FNA
- Digital mammography Bone marrow biopsy and
staging - Sentinal node biopsy
- ? Axillary node dissection?
- Aromatase therapy will supplant Tamoxifen
- Increasing number of women with low stage tumors
receiving chemotherapy - Life long treatment with aromatase inhibitors
62Prevention
- Bilateral mastectomy
- Bilateral mastectomy decreases the risk of breast
cancer by 90 - Salpingo-oophorectomy
- Recent study demonstrated significant decrease in
new breast cancer risk in BRCA carrier women - Chemoprevention
- Tamoxifen
- ?Raloxifen trials ongoing
- ?Aromatase inhibitors?
- Chemoprevention is less likely to be effective in
BRCA1 tumors (greater receptor negative tumors)
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64Internet resources
- Susan B Komen Foundation
- http//www.komen.org/
- National Cancer Institute
- http//www.nci.nih.gov/cancertopics/types/breast
65Mechanism of Action of Aromatase Inhibitors and
Tamoxifen
66Aromatase Inhibitors
- Lower circulating estrogens by preventing
peripheral production of estrogens - anastrazole Arimidex
- letrozole Femara
- exemestane Aromasin
- Each has been studies in different clinical
circumstances
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