Breast conditions Flashcards

1
Q

What is a breast abscess + types + RF + causes?

A
  • Collection of pus within breast
  • This may be a Lactational abscess (blocked duct) or Non-lactational abscess (infection)

RF:
- smoking, damage to nipples (e.g. eczema, candida infection, piercing), underlying beast disease e.g. Ca

Causes
- Staph aureus, strep, anaerobic bacteria

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2
Q

Syx of breast abscess

A

Dx made clinically. Acute onset:
- Swollen
- Fluctuant i.e. able move fluid around within lump
- Tender
- Generalised syx of infection: muscle aches, fatigue, fever, signs of sepsis

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3
Q

Ix + Mx of breast abscess

A

(1.) Confirm dx with USS
(2.) Abx if infection
(3.) Referral to surgical team for drainage/needle aspiration
(4.) MC&S of drained fluid
(5). Continue with breast feeding

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4
Q

WHat is a Fibroadenoma?

A
  • Common benign tumours of stromal/epithelial breast duct tissue.
  • They are not cancerous and does not inc ca risk
  • They respond to female hormones (oestrogen and progesterone) + thus more common in younger women (20-40y) and often regress after menopause.
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5
Q

Clinical features of Fibroadenoma

A

Pt can present with multiple fibroadenomas
- Painless
- Smooth
- Round
- Well circumscribed (well-defined borders)
- Firm
- Mobile, ‘breast mice’ (moves freely under the skin and above the chest wall)
- Usually <3cm diameter

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6
Q

Ix and Mx for Fibroadenoma

A

Triple assessment (exam, imaging, biopsy)
- If <25yrs - needle biopsy not always necessary
- if <40y = USS
- if >40y = mammogram (breast XR)

Management
- Usually left alone
- Surgical excision if >40y or <40y plus lump >4cm diameter

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7
Q

What is Fibrocystic disease?

A
  • Generalised lumpiness to breast this can be of normal variation
  • The connective tissues (stroma), ducts and lobules of the breast respond to oestrogen and progesterone, becoming fibrous and cystic.
  • These changes fluctuate with the menstrual cycle.
  • Syx improve after menopause
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8
Q

Clinical features of Fibrocystic disease?

A
  • Lumpy + fibrous -> cobblestone feel
  • Breast pain or tenderness (mastalgia)
  • Fluctuation of breast size
  • Cyclical nature i.e. worse before periods
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9
Q

Investigations + Management of Fibrocystic disease?

A

Ix
- Triple assessment
- Dx of exclusion, r/o Ca

Management
Conservative (manage pain)
- Well-fitting bra
- Reduce caffeine + salt
- Apply heat to the area
- Analgesia

Medical
- Hormonal treatments (e.g., danazol and tamoxifen) under specialist guidance

Surgical
- Drainage if problematic

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10
Q

What is Mastitis? Causes?

A
  • Mastitis refers to inflammation of breast tissue
  • Complication: breast abscess

Causes
- lactational: accumulated milk due to blocked duct this may progress to s.aureus infection
- non-lactational: infection secondary to periductal mastitis (s.aureus, enterococci, anaerobic bacteria)

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11
Q

Presentation of Mastitis and when may you consider Ix?

A

Dx made clinically. Typically 1-6w postpartum
- Unilateral painful/tender breast
- Fever +general malaise
- Tender, red, swollen hard area of breast (often wedge shape distribution)
- +/- nipple discharge

Ix: Breast milk culture MC&S
- not routinely done
- if mastitis recurrent, or unsualy presentation
- Hospital-acquired infection is likely.
- There is severe deep ‘burning’ breast pain (indicative of ductal infection).

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12
Q

Management of Mastitis

A

(1.) Admission if sepsis, haem unstable, IMC, abscess. 2ww if breast ca.

Lactational Mastitis
(1.) Encourage breast feeding, expressing milk
(2.) Reassure won’t harm baby
(3.) Warm compress,
(4.) Analgesia
(5.) Consider Abx: flucloxacillin if infection or no improve/worsening, milk sample sent for MC&S

Non-lactational Mastitis
(1.) Warm compress
(2.) Identify any predisposing factors e.g. eczema, fungal infection
(3.) Analgesia
(4.) Abx PO co-amoxiclav - in all women with non-lactational mastitis

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13
Q

Most common type of breast ca and common metastases (4)

A
  • Most common cancer in UK.
  • Ductal carcinoma is most common breast ca type
  • Breast ca metastasis sites (2Ls, 2Bs) = Lung, Liver, Bones, Brain.
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14
Q

RF for breast cancer.
What pt’s are classed as ‘high risk’?

A

(1.) Female (99%)
(2.) Increased oestrogen exposure
- earlier menarche and late menopause
- nulliparity or late first pregnancy
- COCP or HRT
(3.) Susceptibility gene mutations - BRAC1/BRAC2
(4.) Age
(5.) Obesity
(6.) Smoking
(7.) FH (first-degree relatives)

High risk patients
- A first-degree relative with breast ca <40y
- A first-degree MALE relative with breast ca
- A first-degree relative with BILATERAL breast ca, first dx <50y
- TWO first-degree relatives with breast cancer

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15
Q

When is breast cancer screening indicated?

A

3 yearly mammogram offered to women 50-70y

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16
Q

Breast Ca clinical features

A
  • Lumps - hard, irregular, painless or fixed in place
  • Tethered to skin or chest wall
  • Nipple retraction
  • Skin dimpling or oedema (peau d’orange)
  • Lymphadenopathy, particularly in axilla
17
Q

Referral criteria for breast Ca

A

2ww Referral Criteria
- >30y + unexplained breast lump
- >50y + unilateral nipple changes (discharge, retraction etc)
- >30y + unexplained axilla lump
- Skin changes suggestive of breast cancer

Non-urgent referral
- <30y + unexplained breast lump

18
Q

Ix for breast Ca

A

Triple assessment: ex + imaging + biopsy
(1.) Clinical assessment: hx + ex
(2.) Imaging: USS <35y, Mammography >35y

(3.) Biopsy (needle aspiration or core biopsy)
- Tested for hormonal receptor activity (Oestrogen/Progesterone/HER2) this guides adjuvant Rx and have a prognostic value

(4.) Routine bloods

(5.) CXR

For staging
- Lymph node assessment: USS, Sentinel Lymph node biopsy
- MRI of breast + axilla
- Liver USS for metastasis
- CT thorax, abdomen and pelvis
- Isotope bone scan for bony metastasis

19
Q

Management of breast ca

A

(1.) MDT
(2.) Surgery - mastectomy or axillary clearance
(3.) Radiotherapy
(4.) Chemotherapy
(5.) Hormonal Rx
- Tamoxifen - oestrogen +ve ca
- Herceptin - in Her2 ca
- Aromatase inhibitor (letrozole) for postmenopausal women