Breast Flashcards
What are the most common causes of breast lumps in the following age brackets:
- 20-30s
- 30-40s
- 60-70s?
- 20-30s → fibroadenomas, abscesses
- 30s-40s → cysts
- 60-70s → breast cancer
What are fibroadenomas? How do they present & how are they managed?
= common benign tumours of stromal/epithelial breast duct tissue.
- More common in women aged 20-40yrs as they are responsive to oestrogen & progesterone.
Presentation:
- Painless, smooth, round lump
- Well circumcised, rubbery, firm
- Mobile under the skin → breast mice
- Usually up to 3cm in diameter
- Often occur in multiples
Diagnosis & Management:
- USS + FNA to confirm
- Surgical excision if >3cm
How do breast cysts present (& what is the key difference between this & fibroadenoma), and how are they managed?
- Occur most commonly between ages 30 and 50 → more so in the perimenopausal period.
Presentation:
- Smooth, well-circumcised lumps
- Soft or firm
- Mobile
- May appear rapidly
- Painful → cyclical with periods
- May fluctuate in size over the menstrual cycle.
Diagnosis & Management:
- Ultrasound - shows as a smooth, black filled cyst.
- Mammogram & aspiration → can also help relieve pain. Clear fluid is reassuring.
- Any solid areas remaining after cyst aspiration should be biopsied to exclude intracystic papillary carcinoma.
Diagnosis & Management:
- Ultrasound - shows as a smooth, black filled cyst.
- Mammogram & aspiration → can also help relieve pain. Clear fluid is reassuring.
- Any solid areas remaining after cyst aspiration should be biopsied to exclude intracystic papillary carcinoma.
What is duct ectasia & how does it present?
- Ducts can shorten & dilate perimenopausally → inflammation in the ducts leads to intermittent discharge from the nipple.
- Common in smokers
- Symptoms
- Thick or watery discharge, green or bloodstained.
- Tenderness or pain
- Slit-like nipple retraction
- Breast lump, which may produce nipple discharge when pressure applied
- Management → triple assessment, supportive care, reassurance, antibiotics if infection suspected
What is an intraductal papilloma & how does it present?
- = a warty lesion that grows within one of the breast ducts, caused by benign epithelial proliferation usually in the ducts near nipples.
- Presentation:
- Common cause of clear or bloody nipple discharge.
- Tenderness or pain
- May be a palpable lump → excision is advised to exclude any malignancy.
- Investigations → triple assessment, ductography (filling defect)
What are the two types of mastitis? For both, what are the causes & management?
- Lactational mastitis → usually in early weeks postpartum
- Due to poor latch, nipple trauma, milk stasis
- S.Aureus most common
- Patients feel very unwell with fever & flu-like illness
- Management
- Supportive → analgesia, continue breast feeding
- Treated early with antibiotics → flucloxacillin
- If an abscess forms it should be drained promptly through aspiration
- Non-lactational → periductal mastitis
- Most commonly seen in smokers.
- S.Aureus, enterococci, and anaerobic bacteria most common
- Repeated infection +/- abscess formation at the edge of the areola → fistula formation.
- Co-amoxiclav is usually first-line.
What are the risk factors of breast cancer?
- Increased oestrogen exposure →Early menarche, late menopause, HRT, obesity, nulliparity, obesity
- COCP → small increased risk, but this returns to normal 10 years after stopping the pill
- Age
- Female gender
- Family history (first degree relative)
- BRCA1/2 mutations
- Not having breastfed
- Lifestyle → excessive alcohol & fat intake
How is breast cancer managed surgically?
Surgery
- least necessary op
- If clear margin, small in large breast, solitary, peripheral, then WIDE LOCAL EXCISION
-If large in small breast, multiple, central, then MASTECTOMY
- If no palpable lymphadenopathy - PRE-OP USS, if this is -ve then SENTINEL NODE BIOPSY
- if palpable lymphadenopathy - AXILLARY NODE CLEARANCE
What are the hormonal therapy options for breast cancer?
- Tamoxifen → for premenopausal women with ER+ cancer
- Side effects → increased risk of endometrial cancer, VTE, and menopausal symptoms
- Aromatase inhibitors → postmenopausal women with ER+ cancer, eg letrozole, anastrozole
What biological therapy can be given to HER2 positive breast cancer?
Herceptin/trastuzumab