Breast Staging Flashcards
How to handle micrometastases in sentinel lymph nodes
- The cutoff is 2mm
- If there was neoadjuvant therapy, there are no micrometastases – all must be counted towards N staging
- If there is a single macrometastasis, all micrometastases count towards N staging
- If there are only micrometastases, no matter how many there are, and the patient did not receive neoadjuvant therapy, the N stage is N1mic
T staging
pTis: Ductal carcinoma in situ
pT1mi: Microinvasive carcinoma (all foci less than or equal to 0.1 cm)
pT1: A carcinoma greater than 0.1 to 2.0 cm in greatest dimension
pT2: A carcinoma greater than 2.0 to 5.0 cm in greatest dimension
pT3: A carcinoma greater than 5.0 cm in greatest dimension
pT4: A carcinoma of any size with direct extension to the chest wall or skin (ulceration or skin nodules)
In the presence of two or more nodules, . . .
In the presence of two or more nodules, use the largest dimension of the largest nodule to determine the T-stage.
How to handle scattered single cells (like lobular) in a sentinel lymph node
Isolated tumor cells: Foci less than 0.2 mm in greatest dimension and/or fewer than 200 carcinoma cells in one tissue section
Micrometastasis: Deposits between 0.2 mm and 0.2 cm in greatest dimension and/or greater than 200 carcinoma cells in one tissue section