11 - Breast Disease Management Flashcards

1
Q

What are some typical presenting features of breast disease?

A
  • Swelling and tenderness
  • Nodularity
  • Mastalgia (cyclical and non-cyclical)
  • Palpable breast lumps
  • Nipple discharge (including galactorrhoea)
  • Mastitis (inflammation of the breast)
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2
Q

What type nipple discharge is a red flag?

A

Unilateral blood stained

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3
Q

How can benign breast lumps be classified histologically?

A

- Non proliferative disorders: no increased risk of cancer

- Proliferative disorders: mild to moderate increased risk

- Atypical hyperplasia: increase in risk of 4.1-5.3

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4
Q

Why is some physiological breast swelling that occurs in adolescence?

A

During puberty thelarche occurs and this can be unilateral or bilateral

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5
Q

What are the two most common benign palpable breast lumps?

A

- Fibrocystic changes: presents with pain and nodularity in women 20-50. Responds to hormones so cyclical

- Fibroadenomas: breast mouse common in 20-30s. Made of fibrous and epithelial tissue. Firm, non tender, highly mobile lump. Hormones involved so HRT increases incidence

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6
Q

What is nodularity of the breast and when is it abnormal?

A
  • Lumpy glandular tissue often in upper outer quadrant of breast that is worst about a week before menstruation
  • If bilaterally symmetrical rarely pathological but if there is asymmetry review after one or two menstrual cycles seeing her mid cycle and enquire about family history
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7
Q

What is cyclical mastalgia and how do we treat it?

A
  • Pain and nodularity that occurs in the breast in the premenstrual phase which rapidly resolves when menstruation starts
  • Wear a supportive bra and analgesia
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8
Q

What does a benign breast lump feel like?

A
  • Smooth
  • Mobile
  • Regular borders
  • Solid or cystic
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9
Q

What are the 4 quadrants of the breast used to describe the location of breast pathology?

A
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10
Q

How do you distinguish fibrocystic changes from a solid tumour?

A
  • Can’t on examination so have to do fine needle aspiration biopsy but do not do this is you strongly suspect cancer as this provides a path for the cancer
  • Often biopsy drains cyst and resolves it but may refill later

– cyst normally found in women who are postmenopausal → cysts respond to hormone changes and sometimes can get bigger and more painful

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11
Q

How do we treat fibroadenomas?

A

Observe every 3 months with an ultrasounds

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12
Q

What is a benign cause of bloody nipple discharge?

A

- Intraductal Papilloma and usually only unilateral

  • Can often have pain as well as blocked milk duct
  • Leaves patient susceptible to infection

– these don’t increase the risk if breast cancer themselves but if you get multiple it can increase the risk

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13
Q

What is mammary duct ectasia and how does it present?

A

When a milk duct becomes dilated and filled with creamy secretions causing periductal inflammation

resulting from shortening and dilation of subaerola ducts

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14
Q

What is mastitis and how do we treat it?

A
  • Generalised cellulitis of the breast, often due to overfilling of the breasts from irregular nursing
  • Cracks in the nipples can allow bacteria to get in and sometimes an abscess forms
  • Treat with antibiotics and by expressing milk from unused breast
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15
Q

What patients need to be referred via the 2 week wait for breast changes?

A
  • Skin changes that suggest breast cancer
  • >30 with unexplained lump in axilla
  • Anyone under 30 with unexplained breast lump with or without pain can be a non-urgent referral
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16
Q

What is the Kubler Ross change curve?

A

Last three changes can often be called acceptance

17
Q

What are some benign conditions causing nipple discharge?

A
  • Duct ectasia
  • Mastitis
  • Intraductal Papilloma
18
Q

What is a radical mastectomy?

A

Surgical procedure involving the removal of breast, underlying chest muscle (including pectoralis major and pectoralis minor), and lymph nodes of the axilla

19
Q

label this

A
20
Q

label this

A
21
Q

breast cancer risk factors

A

age: increasing age

previous breast cancer

family history (BRCA 1 and 2)

dense breast tissue

benign breast diseases

hormonal factors

lifestyle

22
Q

the more dense the breast tissue is a person more or less likely to get breast cancer

A

more, harder to spot in dense tissue

23
Q

types of benign breast disease

A

→ epithelial (intraductal papilloma and adenoma)
→ mesenchymal (lipoma and fibroma)

→ mixed (fibroadenomas)

→ cysts

24
Q

malignant breast masses vs benign breast masses

A