Chapter 55: Breast- Breast Cancer Flashcards
What is the incidence of breast cancer?
12% lifetime risk
What percentage of women with breast cancer have no known risk
factor?
75%!
What percentage of all breast cancers occur in women younger than
30 years?
≈2%
What are the major breast cancer susceptibility genes?
BRCA1 and BRCA2
What option exists to decrease the risk of breast cancer in women
with BRCA?
Prophylactic bilateral mastectomy
What is the most common motivation for medicolegal cases
involving the breast?
Failure to diagnose a breast carcinoma
What is the “TRIAD OF ERROR” for misdiagnosed breast cancer?
- Age <45 years
- Self-diagnosed mass
- Negative mammogram
Note: >75% of cases of MISDIAGNOSED breast cancer have these three characteristics
What are the history risk factors for breast cancer?
“NAACP”:
- Nulliparity
- Age at menarche (<13 years)
- Age at menopause (>55 years)
- Cancer of the breast (in self or family)
- Pregnancy with first child (>30 years)
What are physical/anatomic risk factors for breast cancer?
“CHAFED LIPS”:
- Cancer in the breast (3% synchronous contralateral cancer)
- Hyperplasia (moderate/florid) (2× risk)
- Atypical hyperplasia (4× risk)
- Female (100× male risk)
- Elderly
- Dcis
- LCIS
- Inherited genes (BRCA I and II)
- Papilloma (1.5×)
- Sclerosing adenosis (1.5×)
Is “run of the mill” fibrocystic disease a risk factor for breast
cancer?
No
What are the possible symptoms of breast cancer?
No symptoms
Mass in the breast
Pain (most are painless)
Nipple discharge
Local edema
Nipple retraction
Dimple
Nipple rash
Why does skin retraction occur?
Tumor involvement of Cooper’s ligaments and subsequent traction on ligaments pull skin inward
What are the signs of breast cancer?
- Mass
- 1 cm is usually the smallest lesion that can be palpated on examination
- Dimple
- Nipple rash
- Edema
- Axillary/supraclavicular nodes
What is the most common site of breast cancer?
≈50% of cancers develop in the upper outer quadrants
What are the different types of invasive breast cancer?
- Infiltrating ductal carcinoma (≈75%)
- Medullary carcinoma (≈15%)
- Infiltrating lobular carcinoma (≈5%)
- Tubular carcinoma (≈2%)
- Mucinous carcinoma (colloid) (≈1%)
- Inflammatory breast cancer (≈1%)
What is the most common type of breast cancer?
Infiltrating ductal carcinoma
What is the differential diagnosis?
- Fibrocystic disease of the breast
- Fibroadenoma
- Intraductal papilloma
- Duct ectasia
- Fat necrosis
- Abscess
- Radial scar
- Simple cyst
Describe the appearance of the edema of the dermis in
inflammatory carcinoma of the breast.
Peau d’orange (orange peel)
What are the screening recommendations for breast cancer:
Breast exam recommendations?
- Self-exam of breasts monthly
- Ages 20 to 40 years: breast exam every 2 to 3 years by a physician
- >40 years: annual breast exam by physician
What are the screening recommendations for breast cancer:
Mammograms?
Mammogram every year or every other year after age 40
When is the best time for breast self-exams?
1 week after menstrual period
Why is mammography a more useful diagnostic tool in older women
than in younger?
Breast tissue undergoes fatty replacement with age, making masses more visible; younger women have more fibrous tissue, which makes mammograms harder to interpret
What are the radiographic tests for breast cancer?
Mammography and breast ultrasound, MRI
What is the classic picture of breast cancer on mammogram?
Spiculated mass

Which option is the best initial test to evaluate a breast mass in a
woman <30 years?
Breast ultrasound
What are the methods for obtaining tissue for pathologic
examination?
Fine-needle aspiration (FNA), core biopsy (larger needle core sample), mammotome stereotactic biopsy, and open biopsy, which can be incisional (cutting a piece of the mass) or excisional (cutting out the entire mass)
What are the indications for biopsy?
- Persistent mass after aspiration
- Solid mass
- Blood in cyst aspirate
- Suspicious lesion by mammography/ultrasound/MRI
- Bloody nipple discharge
- Ulcer or dermatitis of nipple
- Patient’s concern of persistent breast abnormality
What is the process for performing a biopsy when a nonpalpable
mass is seen on mammogram?
Stereotactic (mammotome) biopsy or needle localization biopsy
What is a needle localization biopsy (NLB)?
Needle localization by radiologist, followed by biopsy; removed breast tissue must be checked by mammogram to ensure all of the suspicious lesion has been
excised
What is a mammotome biopsy?
Mammogram-guided computerized stereotatic core biopsies
What is obtained first, the mammogram or the biopsy?
Mammogram is obtained first; otherwise, tissue extraction (core or open) may alter the mammographic findings (fine needle aspiration may be done prior to the mammogram because the fine needle usually will not affect the mammographic findings)
What would be suspicious mammographic findings?
Mass, microcalcifications, stellate/spiculated mass
What is a “radial scar” seen on mammogram?
Spiculated mass with central lucency, ± microcalcifications
What tumor is associated with a radial scar?
Tubular carcinoma; thus, biopsy is indicated
What is the “workup” for a breast mass?
- Clinical breast exam
- Mammogram or breast ultrasound
- Fine needle aspiration, core biopsy, or open biopsy
How do you proceed if the mass appears to be a cyst? (US)
Aspirate it with a needle
Is the fluid from a breast cyst sent for cytology?
Not routinely; bloody fluid should be sent for cytology
When do you proceed to open biopsy for a breast cyst?
- In the case of a second cyst recurrence
- Bloody fluid in the cyst
- Palpable mass after aspiration
What is the preoperative staging workup in a patient with breast cancer?
- Bilateral mammogram (cancer in one breast is a risk factor for cancer in the contralateral breast!)
- CXR (to check for lung metastasis)
- LFTs (to check for liver metastasis)
- Serum calcium level
- alkaline phosphatase (if these tests indicate bone metastasis/“bone pain,” proceed to bone scan)
- Other tests, depending on signs/symptoms (e.g., head CT scan if patient hasfocal neurologic deficit, to look for brain metastasis)
What hormone receptors must be checked for in the biopsy specimen?
Estrogen and progesterone receptors—this is key for determining adjuvant treatment; this information must be obtained on all specimens (including fine-needle aspirates)
What staging system is used for breast cancer?
TMN:Tumor/Metastases/Nodes (AJCC)
Describe the staging (simplified):
Stage I
Tumor ≤2 cm in diameter without metastases, no nodes
Describe the staging (simplified):
Stage IIA
- Tumor ≤2 cm in diameter with mobile axillary nodes
- Tumor 2 to 5 cm in diameter, no nodes
Describe the staging (simplified):
Stage IIB
- Tumor 2 to 5 cm in diameter with mobile axillary nodes
- Tumor >5 cm with no nodes
Describe the staging (simplified):
Stage IIIA
- Tumor >5 cm with mobile axillary nodes
- Any size tumor with fixed axillary nodes, no metastases
Describe the staging (simplified):
Stage IIIB
- Peau d’orange (skin edema)
- Chest wall invasion/fixation
- Inflammatory cancer orBreast skin ulceration
- Breast skin satellite metastases
- Any tumor and + ipsilateral internal mammary LNs
Describe the staging (simplified):
Stage IIIC
Any size tumor, no distant metastases
POSITIVE: supraclavicular, infraclavicular, or internal mammary LNs
Describe the staging (simplified):
Stage IV
Distant metastases (including ipsilateral supraclavicular nodes)
What are the sites of metastases?
- LNs (most common)
- Lung pleura
- Liver
- Bones
- Brain
What are the major treatments of breast cancer?
- Modified radical mastectomy
- Lumpectomy and radiation + sentinel LN dissection
- (Both treatments either ± postop chemotherapy/tamoxifen)
What are the indications for radiation therapy after a modified radical mastectomy?
- Stage IIIA
- Stage IIIB
- Pectoral muscle/fascia invasion
- Positive internal mammary LN
- Positive surgical margins
- ≥4 positive axillary LNs
- postmenopausal
What breast carcinomas are candidates for lumpectomy and radiation (breast-conserving therapy)?
Stages I and II (tumors <5 cm)
What approach may allow a patient with stage IIIA cancer to havebreast-conserving surgery?
NEOadjuvant chemotherapy—if the preop chemo shrinks the tumor
What is the treatment of inflammatory carcinoma of the breast?
Chemotherapy first! Then often followed by radiation, mastectomy, or both
What is “lumpectomy and radiation”?
- Lumpectomy (segmental mastectomy: removal of a part of the breast)
- axillary node dissection
- and a course of radiation therapy after operation, over a period of several weeks
What are other contraindications to lumpectomy and radiation?
- Previous radiation to the chest
- Positive margins
- Collagen vascular disease (e.g., scleroderma)
- Extensive DCIS (often seen as diffuse microcalcification)
-
Relative contraindications:
- Lesion that cannot be seen on the mammograms (i.e., early recurrence will be missed on follow-up mammograms)
- Very small breast (no cosmetic advantage)
What is a modified radical mastectomy?
- Breast
- axillary nodes (level II, I)
- and nipple–areolar complex are removed
- Pectoralis major and minor muscles are not removed (Auchincloss modification)
- Drains are placed to drain lymph fluid
Where are the drains placed with an MRM?
- Axilla
- Chest wall (breast bed)
When should the drains be removed?
<30 cc/day drainage
How can the long thoracic and thoracodorsal nerves be identified during an axillary dissection?
Nerves can be stimulated with a forceps, which results in contraction of the latissimus dorsi (thoracodorsal nerve) or anterior serratus (long thoracic nerve)
What is a sentinel node biopsy?
Instead of removing all the axillary LNs, the primary draining or “sentinel” LN is removed
How is the sentinel LN found?
Inject blue dye and/or technetium-labeled sulfur colloid (best results with both)
What follows a positive sentinel node biopsy?
Removal of the rest of the axillary LNs
What is now considered the standard of care for LN evaluation in women with T1 or T2 tumors (stages I and IIA) and clinically negative axillary LNs?
Sentinel LN dissection
What do you do with a mammotome biopsy that returns as “atypical hyperplasia”?
Open needle localization biopsy as many will have DCIS or invasive cancer
How does tamoxifen work?
Binds estrogen receptors
What is the treatment for local recurrence in breast after lumpectomy and radiation?
“Salvage” mastectomy
Can tamoxifen prevent breast cancer?
Yes. In the Breast Cancer Prevention Trial of 13,000 women at increased risk of developing breast cancer, tamoxifen reduced risk by ≈50% across all ages
What are common options for breast reconstruction?
- TRAM flap
- Transverse Rectus Abdominis Myocutaneous flap
- implant
- latissimus dorsi flap
What are side effects of tamoxifen?
- Endometrial cancer (2.5× relative risk)
- DVT
- pulmonary embolus
- cataracts
- hot flashes
- mood swings
Give the common adjuvant therapy for the following patients withbreast cancer:
Premenopausal, node +, ER −
(These are rough guidelines; check for current guidelines, as they are always changing.)
Chemotherapy
Give the common adjuvant therapy for the following patients with breast cancer:
Premenopausal, node +, ER −
Chemotherapy and tamoxifen
Give the common adjuvant therapy for the following patients withbreast cancer.
Premenopausal, node −, ER +
Tamoxifen and/or chemotherapy
Give the common adjuvant therapy for the following patients withbreast cancer:
Postmenopausal, node +, ER +
Tamoxifen, ± chemotherapy
Give the common adjuvant therapy for the following patients withbreast cancer:
Postmenopausal, node +, ER −Chemotherapy, ± tamoxifen
Chemotherapy, ± tamoxifen