Transcript
Page 1: Benign Breast Disease

Benign Breast Disease

Elizabeth Peralta, M.D.

Breast Surgeon

Sutter Pacific Medical Group of the Redwoods

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Breast Complaints

• Pain

• Mass

• Skin or Nipple Changes

• Nipple Discharge

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Diagnosis and Treatment of Breast Complaints

• Most important is to rule out malignancy

• Significance of a finding is greatest in a high-risk patient

• Balance between reassurance and exhausting all diagnostic options

• Treatment should not be worse than the disease

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Mammary ductogram demonstrating lobules

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Pre-menarchal ductule

Terminal ductal-lobular unit

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Breast Development

Menarche and Reproductive Cycles:• Pulsed estrogen exposure causes rapid

growth, elongation and branching• Term pregnancy leads to terminal

differentiation and stops growth• End bud epithelial tissue undergoes cyclic

proliferation • Breast feeding is associated with a lower risk

of breast cancer

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Normal breast inpregnancy and after

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Breast Development

• Involution: Changes of involution begin after cessation of lactation and continue through menopause

• Competing involution and proliferative processes are patchy and increased in peri-menopause and with HRT

• Hyperplasia with atypia and DCIS peak in this period

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Involutional and cystic change

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Pre-Cancer Changes

• Intraepithelial neoplasia (IEN): a lesion which is non-invasive but contains genetic abnormalities, loss of cellular control functions, and some microscopic features of cancer cells

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Biopsy results which represent increased breast cancer risk:

• Atypical Ductal Hyperplasia (ADH)

• Atypical Lobular Hyperplasia (ALH)

• Lobular Carcinoma in Situ (LCIS)

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Biopsy results which do not show breast cancer risk:

• Cysts

• Fibrosis

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Breast Cancer Risk

Major Risk Factors (RR > 4)•Previous breast cancer

•Family history (bilateral, premenopausal or mother and sister)

•Atypical hyperplasia

•LCIS or DCIS

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L

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Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS)

Category Definition Action PPVmalignancy

0 Incomplete, possible finding

Additional imaging

15%

1 Negative Routine screening

<1%

2 Benign findings Routine screening

<1%

3 Probably benign findings

6 mo follow-up 2%

4 Suspicious abnormality

Biopsy 30-45%

5 Highly suggestive of malignancy

Biopsy, action as indicated

93%

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Causes of Breast Pain

• Endocrine: Cyclical, peri-menopausal, and with hormone replacement therapy

• Edema/weight (caffeine, lack of support)

• Mastitis (term usually associated with lactational problems)

• Breast Abscess

• Angina, esophagitis

• Costochondritis, fibromyalgia, anxiety?

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Treatment of Breast Pain• Elastic/compressive bra (sport or minimizer style rather

than underwire or push-up)• NSAIDS (topical?) Omega-3 fatty acids (evening primrose

oil)• Decrease or stop hormone replacement• Danazol, gestrinone, tamoxifen may help but cause hot

flashes and masculinizing effects • 50% spontaneous remission, therefore, vitamin E, b

complex, evening primrose oil, decreasing caffeine seem to help half the time!

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Evaluation of a Breast Mass

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Case 1: Palpable breast mass

• 36 y/o woman with cyclical breast tenderness

• Noticed a new mass 2 days ago

• Very anxious because a cousin had breast cancer at age 36

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Mammogram of palpable breast mass

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Sonogram of simple cyst

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Case 2: Palpable breast mass

• 42 y/o woman, “I always have lumpy breasts” found a new lump

• Onset 3 months ago, not changing

• Moderate cyclical breast pain

• Lump is in upper outer quadrant, firm, but very mobile

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Mammogram of palpable breast mass

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Sonogram of fibroadenoma

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Case 3: Breast Redness and Pain

• 55 y/o woman, heavy smoker

• Onset of breast pain 4 days ago

• Gradually worsening, with accompanying mass and erythema

• Not participating in mammographic screening

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Breast Pain and Erythema

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Sonogram of breast abscess

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Non-lactational breast abscess:

• The median age at presentation was 40yr (range 22-71). Among cases, 17 of 19 (89%) were smokers with a mean exposure of 24.4 pk-yr each.

• In the control group, 9 of 42 (21%) were smokers with a mean exposure of 17.7 pk-yr each (p=0.001, chi-square test of independence).

• Ten of the 19 required surgical drainage and one of these revealed carcinoma associated with the abscess, necessitating mastectomy.

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Conclusions: Smoking and Breast Abscesses

• Subareolar abscess is strongly associated with cigarette smoking, with the average patient presenting at age 40 after smoking more than 20 years.

• Aspiration and antibiotics, the preferred treatment for lactational abscess, had less than a 50% success rate in this population.

• Carcinoma must be ruled out in both surgically and conservatively managed patients.

• Smokers who present with subareolar abscess should be urged to quit for this and other health reasons

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Nipple Discharge

• Spontaneous• Unilateral, single

orifice• Clear or blood-tinged• Progresses over time• DDX: Duct ectasia,

intraductal papilloma, DICS

• 10% malignant

• Elicited, intermittent• Multiple ducts,

bilateral• Green, murky, white• May stop if abstain

from manipulation• Biopsy if abnormal

imaging or progressive• Same DDX

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Evaluation of Nipple Discharge

• History• Prolactin, TSH if suspect galactorrhea• Mammogram, ultrasound• Ductogram optional• Surgical consultation, Mammary duct

excision is diagnostic and stops discharge• Vacuum assisted core needle biopsy may

also stop the discharge

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Hormone Replacement Therapy and

Breast Cancer Risk Years ofHormoneTreatment

20 yr cumulative breastcancer rate /1000 women

None

5

20

45

10

47

51

57

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Cancer Prevention

• Quit smoking: More women die of lung cancer than breast cancer

• Maintain a healthy balance of exercise, recreation, rest, and weight control

• Chemoprevention: for women at increased risk (family history, abnormal biopsy)


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