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Breast Surgery
Christiane Riedinger, September 2014
Resources: Path notes, Surgical Talk, Lecture Notes in Clin Surgery
TOC
● Clinical Assessment
● Pathology
● Management
Clinical Assessment
History
● Symptoms of breast disease
○ Pain
■ Cyclical? => Bilat. can depend on diet (caffeine)
Drug Mx: change contraceptive method,
danazol, tamoxifen, LHRH analogues
■ Non-cyclical? => Abscess, CA, Tietze’s syndrome*,
Herpes Zoster and other chest wall lesions.
○ Discharge
■ Clear Intraductal papilloma (benign)
■ Milky Galactorrhoea
■ Purulent Abscess
■ Multi-coloured Duct ectasia (inflammatory)
■ Blood Intraductal papilloma, CA, Paget’s
○ Lump
Breast Tumours: How to describe a lump
● she cuts the fish 3x + PER
○ site, size, surface
○ colour, contour, consistency, compressability/fluctuancy
○ tenderness, temperature, transillumination
○ fluid-filled, fixed (tethering vs. fixation, depth), fields (lymphatic drainage)
○ pulsatile (e.g. aneurysm)
○ expansile
○ reducible/relation to skin, muscle, other structures (hernia/breast lesion)
● Difference between tethering (lesion near fibrous septum or ligaments of Astley
Cooper, evident upon elevation of the arms or tension of pec major - dimpling) and
fixation (tumour attached to muscle and skin? implies more advanced disease)
● ??????
Breast Examination (1)
● Ask about pain
● Be ruthless but polite in terms of exposure for inspection
● General observation
○ General appearance - cachexia, pallor, SOB
○ Signs of previous surgery - wide local excision, mastectomy, reconstruction
○ Signs of infection
○ Nipples
■ Discharge, e.g. lactation, blood (duct ectasia, intraductal papilloma)
■ Rash (e.g. in Paget’s, DCIS underlying nipple, peau d’orange)
■ Inversion/retraction of nipples
■ Accessory nipples (usually below breast), accessory breast tissue (usually in axilla)
○ Supraclavicular area and axilla - swollen, nodes, veins, muscle wasting
● Continue with patient sitting at 45*
● Inspect breasts
○ Ask if pain when moving arms
○ Watch breasts as arms behind head – T4 skin, Astley Cooper* => Tethering?
arms behind back – T4 chest wall pec. major => Fixation?
○ = check for invading masses of stage T4
○ Ask about discharge and ask patient to demonstrate it
Breast Examination (2)
● Continue with patient lying flat with hands behind the head
● Cover patient and expose body parts needed
● Check inframammary fold with back of hand
○ Say: “I am now examining under the breast”
○ Most common finding: intertrigo – chronic thrush under breast
● Palpate 5 areas of the breast and axilla and nodes
○ Upper outer quadrant + axilla (most common site of lesions)
Hold pt’s R arm with your R arm then palpate axilla with the other hand. Ask patient to lift arm up, place
hand in axilla, lift arm down to rest on yours, then roll fingers down axilla 4 times. Examine the left axilla
with the left hand and vice versa. If you feel a lump, feel if it is fixed or not.
○ Upper inner quadrant
○ Lower inner quadrant
○ Lower outer quadrant
○ Areolar complex
○ Palpate normal breast first
■ During palpation don’t lift up hand
■ Move all around breast
○ Lymph nodes: Axillary (already done), infraclavicular, supraclavicular, neck
● Cover patient
Breast Examination (3)
● PRESENTATION
○ To complete my examination, I’d like to
■ Send off potential discharge for cytology
■ Palpate the liver and ausculate the chest for suspected mestastases
■ Perform a triple assessment
■ Clinical Hx and Ex => done
■ Radiological Mammography and US +/- MRI
■ Pathological Fine needle aspiration => cytology and core biopsy
■ MRI if younger patient or discrepancy between clinical assessment and
mammography or when planning breast conserving surgery
○ This lady has a non-tender/tender Xcm lump in the X quadrant of the X breast. It has a XX
surface and a XX edge, is mobile/immobile and not/attached to XX. There are XXX
palpable in the axilla, continue description as above. There are XXX nodes palpable in the
supraclavicular fossa / other sites. My differential diagnosis is XXXX based on the age of
the patient, the most likely diagnosis is XXXX.
Breast Examination (4)
● Note main DD has 4 choices (Mannequin does not have inflammatory lesion and 2 lumps to palpate, the benign diagnosis depends on age of
patient)
○ Fibrocystic lesion
■ Women >30-40
■ Changes with cycle
○ Benign neoplasm, e.g. fibroadenoma
■ Women <30-40
■ Changes with cycle
○ Malignant lesion: Peau d’orange, nipple retraction, tethering, fixation, change in breast size, ulceration, Paget’s
■ Painless lump
■ More likely in upper outer quadrant?
○ Inflammatory lesion
■ Usually painful
● DD of breast discharge
○ Ask if spontaneous or on squeezing
○ Orange watery fluid from single duct Intraductal papilloma
○ Bright red blood from single duct Papilloma or malignancy
○ White or green discharge from multiple ducts Benign
○ Bilateral milky discharge Galactorrhoea
● Note on axillary nodes
○ 25% of palpable node will not contain metastases
○ 25% of nodes containing metastases are not palpable
Aids to DD
● Have 4 main options for lump (note for exam: mannequin does not have
inflammatory option, has 1 palpable benign or malignant lump. Need to distinguish 2
benign conditions by age of the patient)
○ Benign fibroCYSTIC lesion in older women, terminal ducts undergo
apoptosis and terminal lobuloaveolar unit produces fluid => cyst
■ Change with cycle
■ Most likely if >>30y and up to menopause
○ Benign FIBROADENOMA = STROMA, “breast mice”
■ Change with cycle
■ Most likely if <~30y!!! Young!!!
○ MALIGNANT tumour
■ Painless lump
○ INFLAMMATORY lesion
■ PAINFUL, potential purulent discharge
Pathology
Breast Tumours: Risk factors
● Age
● Gender - only 15% of breast CA patients have other risk factors
● Inherited trait
● Oe exposure: early menarche, late menopause, no children, children at age of >35y
● OCP (risk returns back to normal)
● HRT (beyond the age of 55), risk returns to normal 5y post stopping, combined Oe/P
HRT is worse than Oe only
● Previous benign breast disease: atypical epithelial hyperplasia (fibrocystic lesion)
● Obesity, alcohol intake, NOT smoking!?! (Acc. to surgical talk)
● Radiation exposure, esp. post lymphoma (mantle radiotherapy)
Breast Tumours: Overview
● While listing the different pathological types of tumours, think of the
different tissues it can originate from
○ Types of breast tissue epithelium (duct vs. lobule)
○ Fibroblasts (stroma)
○ Types of skin epithelium (keratinocytes vs. glands etc..)
Benign Breast Tumours/Lesions
● General: Lipoma, sebaceous cyst, hamartoma, sarcoma (rare), 2* mets
● Fibrocystic >>35, perimenopausal, remodelling of breast tissue causing fluid entrapment
○ Non-proliferating cystic changes => cyclical, ASPIRATION AND CYTOLOGY
○ Proliferating:
■ Epithelial hypertrophy
■ Sclerosing adenosis =>
● Inflammatory
○ Mastitis (lactating) => ABX, ABSCESS ASPIRATION AND IV ABX, BREASTFEEDING
CONTINUATION
○ Non-lactating: piercings => periductal mastitis, fungal in immunosuppressed,
granulomatous in sarcoidosis or TB, infective in T2DM, RA => TREAT UNDERLYING
CAUSE AND CAUSATIVE AGENT
● Benign
○ Fibroadenoma <<35 (Breast mice) => EXCISION OR NO Rx
○ Phylloides: WLE OR MASTECOMY AS 15% MALIGNANT
○ Intraductal papilloma => EXCISION OR NO Rx
Malignant Breast Tumours
● DCIS
● DCIS near nipple = Paget’s disease
● DCIS subtype: comedone
● LCIS
● Invasive ductal NST
● Invasive ductal
○ Lobular
○ Medullary
○ Colloid/Mucinous
○ Tubular
○ Inflammatory
○ Cibriform
○ Micropapillary
○ Apocrine
○ Adenoid
○ Metaplastic
● Invasive LCIS
Breast Tumours: Organisation by site
● 50% upper outer
quadrant
● 20% central
● 4% bilateral 1* or >1 1*
lobular
carcinoma
invasive ductal carcinoma
mucinous carcinoma
medullary carcinoma
intraductal papillomaPaget’s,
DCIS
lipoma
sebaceous
cyst
stroma:
fibrocystic
fibroadenoma
phylloides
Breast Tumours: Genetic Changes
A HER2 -ve slow growing, responds to tamoxifen but not well to chemo
OeR +ve = luminal
B HER2 +ve double +ve, worse, often node involvement
basal-like HER2 -ve, triple -ve, highly aggressive, medullary, BRCA1/2 involved
OeR -ve PR -ve
HER2+ve HER2 +ve highly proliferative
● 10% genetic predisposition of which 30% BRCA1/2
● RECEPTORS
○ 30% HER2 upregulated (human epidermal GF = Y kinase) => worse prognosis
○ Oe R present/absent => if present better prognosis
● PROTEINS
○ Ras/Myc upregulated
○ pRb/p53 downregulated
● Classification according to receptor involvement:
Management
Screening of Breast Cancer
● 47-73 (after 70 voluntary)
● Every 3y
● 2 view mammogram looking for calcification
● Procedure
○ +ve (abnormal) => core biopsy
■ B1: Normal => return to screening (if biopsy from wrong area
rebiopsy)
■ B2: Benign => reassure, return to screening
■ B3: Uncertain malignant potential => excision
■ B4: Suspicion of malignancy => rebiopsy or excision
■ B5: Malignant => surgical excision (WLE or mastectomy)
● B5a - DCIS
● B5b - invasive
○ -ve (normal) => return to screening programme
Ix of Breast Disease
● Referral from GP or screening of suspicious lumps or mamogram findings:
● Triple assessment (diagnostic tests)
○ Clinical Hx and Ex
○ Radiological Mammography and US (useful for Ix of lesions already diagnosed,
not useful for ab initio identification, also US axilla)
○ Pathological Fine-needle aspiration FNA cytology and core biopsy
■ FNA: cystic lesion disappears on aspiration => diagnosis
■ Core biopsy only performed if suspicion of cancer after FNA
○ MRI if younger patient (high tissue density on mammobraphy) or discrepancy
between clinical assessment and mammography or when planning breast
conserving surgery
● Other Ix:
○ FBC (potential marrow involvement), LFTs, U&E/CA, CXR, Isotope bone scan,
liver US.
Ix of Breast Disease: Mammography
● Views
○ Mediolateral-oblique view MLO
○ Craniocaudal view CC
○ Lateromedial/mediolateral view?
● Result suspicious of cancer
○ White asymmetrical spiculated lesion containing microcalcification
○ DCIS: cluster of microcalcification
● Efficiency
○ Misses 7% of palpable cancers and 20% in pre-menopausal women
○ Lobular carcinoma not well detected
● ADD
Ix of Breast Disease: Staging
● Staging informs on state of progression and guides treatment
● Assessment for staging
○ Lymph node biopsy
○ CT for metastases
○ Bone scan for metastases
○ CXR for metastases
○ Liver US for metastases
○ Blood tests as before: FBC, LFTs, serum calcium, U&E
● TNM
○ Tx 1* cannot be assessed
○ T0 No evidence of 1*
○ Tis In situ
○ T1 <2cm
○ T2 2-5cm
○ T3 >5cm
○ T4 Chest wall or skin involvement
● Nx Lymph nodes cannot be assessed
e.g. if removed
● N0 no involvement
● N1 Movable axillary
● N2 Fixed axillary
● N3 Ipsilateral thoracic nodes
● Mx Cannot be assessed
● M0 No distant mets
● M1 Distant mets
Why Stage and Grade
● Grade = biology/histology differentiation
● Stage = anatomy infiltration
● Prognosis guided by
○ grade (incl. node biopsies)
○ stage
i
Treatment Overview
● Management by MDT: surgeon, oncologist, nurse, radiologist, histopathologist, cytologist,
coordinator, +/- plastic surgery, genetics, palliative care
Breast care nurse from 1st visit for SUPPORT AND EDUCATION
● Medical
○ Tyrosine kinase inhibitors: HER2 antagonists Herceptin
○ Endocrine treatment: Oe antagonist Tamoxifen pre-menopausal, Arimidex post
● Surgical
○ Excision of the tumour
○ Surgery to axilla
○ +/- Breast reconstruction
● Radiological
● +/- Adjuvant therapy: hormonal, biological or chemotherapy, neo-adjuvant means prior to
surgery
● Know local policies and national guidelines
● Consider social circumstances of patient
● Breast care nurse from 1st visit for SUPPORT AND EDUCATION
Surgical Treatment of the 1* Tumour
● <4cm
○ Breast-conserving surgery: WLE wide local excision and radiotherapy
○ OR mastectomy
○ Depends on patient choice, 75% chose WLE
● For impalpable tumours
○ Stereotactic localisation under mammographic control
○ Needle is placed in place of microcalcification
○ Area surrounding the needle is excised
○ Excised area X-rayed to confirm it contains the calcifications
● If margins of local excision not clear, re-excision is required
● Treatment of axilla is not normally done in DCIS
Treatment of the Axilla
● Aim: Prevent cancer spread and establish prognosis (axillary nodes most important prognostic
indicator!)
● Procedures:
Sentinel lymph node biopsy SNL
1. Pre-op US with FNA
2. Sentinel node biopsy
● Pre-op intradermal injection of technetium and methylene blue into tumour / periareolar
● Wait 2h
● Find first axillary node draining the cancer, excise and examine.
● Find hot and blue nodes and excise just these
3. If sentinel node +ve for tumour => axillary clearance
Axillary sampling
1. Remove >4 nodes and analyse histologically, if any +ve then axillary clearance
● Grades of axillary clearance
○ Axillary sampling Lower part of axillary fatpad, obsolete
○ Level 1 Nodes up to axillary vein
○ Level 2 Nodes up to pec minor
○ Level 3 Nodes up to 1st rib
○ The more, the higher the risk of nerve damage and lymphoedema
● Do NOT perform radiotherapy to a cleared axilla => inc. risk of lymphoedema
Surgical Treatment of Breast CA
● Conservation surgery (usually <4cm)
○ Wide local excision WLE, removal of cylinder of breast tissue down to the pectoral muscle
○ Limited axillary surgery
○ Post-operative radiotherapy
● Total simple mastectomy (usually >4cm or too large in small breast or nipple)
○ Removal of breast tissue, nipple and areola +/- axillary surgery
● Skin sparing mastectomy
○ Circular incision around nipple and removal of breast tissue with nipple by diathermy excision
through incision, followed by insertion of drainage tubes +/- implants and closure
● Nipple sparing mastectomy with simultaneous reconstruction
● Nipple and areola sparing mastectomy
● Most radical treatment - but no increased survival
○ Radical mastectomy with axillary clearance
○ Post-operative radiotherapy (if >5cm or close to chest wall)
● +/- chemotherapy, endocrine and antibody therapy
Breast Reconstruction
● Immediate
● Delayed
○ If significant comorbidity
○ or post-operative radiotherapy
● Becker prosthesis
○ Prosthesis placed under the pectoralis muscle / implant with potential port
○ Simplest procedure
● Autologous reconstruction / tissue flaps, when skin replacement needed
○ Latissimus dorsi
○ DIEP
■ Deep inferior epigastric perforator (a, anastomosed onto inf. mammary a)
■ Only skin and fat flap
○ previously TRAB (now replaced by DIEP)
■ Transverse abdominus,
■ Muscle sacrificed
Chemotherapy
● Overall reduces the risk of (distal) recurrence by 20%
● Greatest success in young node + xx
● In each case, assess potential benefits against toxicity (RISK Management!)
● Combination more effective than single agent (single more palliative)
● Six cycles of cytotoxic chemo given 1/m for 6m
● FEC: 5-fluorouracil, epirubicin and cyclophosphamide
● Scoring of toxicity 0-4, 1 can still work, from 2 on cannot continue work
● Side-effects
○ Alopecia (can prevent with scalp cooling)
○ Mouth ulcers
○ Sterility
○ Myelosuppression
○ Extravasation: stop infusion don’t remove!
○ Lethargy
○ Nausea and vomiting
○ Teratogenicity
○ Specific to individual drugs
Radiotherapy
● Reduces (local) recurrence but not mortality
● Usually combined with WLE
● 50Gy external beam radiotherapy 5d/w for 3w
● Side-effects
○ Tiredness
○ Skin irritation (~sunburn) from ~week3
○ Shrinkage of the irradiated breast
● Reduces risk of recurrence from 30% to 5% in 10y
Adjuvant Therapy
● Improves survival by 5-10% over 10y
● Oe antagonists / endocrine therapy
○ Usually for 5y if OeR +ve, especially if nodal spread. +/- ovarian ablation
○ Also reduce risk of contralateral breast CA, recurrence, death rate, 5%/10% benefit if node
-ve/+ve at 10y
○ Side effects: menopausal-type symptoms (less so with arimidex)
○ Tamoxifen - actually a mixed agonist/antagonist = SERM selective OeR modulator
○ Arimidex = anastrozole - an aromatase inhibitor that blocks peripheral oe production in
fat tissues in post-menopausal women where ovaries no longer produce Oe
● Herceptin = Trastuzumab
○ HER2 antibody
○ 25% of breast CA HER2 +ve (i.e. with HER2 overexpression?)
○ Side-effects: cardiomyopathy and congestive cardiac failure
○ Given every 3w for 1y as long as no cardiac problems
○ 3-monthly echocardiograms to monitor (see NICE)
● Neo-adjuvant therapy***
○ Treat with endocrine and/or cytotoxic drugs prior to surgery to allow shrinkage of the
tumour, followed by radiotherapy post-operatively
Prognosis
● Predictive factors
○ Node involvement single best predictor of survival! Nr of nodes ~ p of distant
mets!
○ Also: size, grade (differentiation), Nottingham Prognostic Index (size, grade and
nodes), vascular invasion, hormone R, HER2 R, histo type.
● DCIS >90% 5y
● if recurrence 50% invasive
● <1% death risk
● <2cm 90% 5y
● node -ve 80% 5y
● 16 nodes 50% 5y
● distant mets 15% 5y, life expectancy 2-3y
● metastases to: (LCIS different: CSF, serosal surfaces, GI, ovaries, uterus, bone
marrow)
Advanced Disease
● Tumour >5cm initial Mx non-surgical: chemotherapy with subsequent surgery +/-
radiotherapy
● Sole radiotherapy only if unfit for surgery or very elderly +/- adjuvant
● Metastatic disease: systemic therapy = hormonal, chemotherapy for advanced
visceral disease
● Treatment of bone mets
○ Radiotherapy
○ Bisphosphonates
● Treatment of hypercalcaemia due to bone mets
○ Hydration with IV saline
○ Diuretics
○ Bisphosphonates (inhibit Ras farnesylation and osteoclast proliferation)
● Palliative care
○ Treat pain and other symptoms of advanced disease
Additional Info
https://www.adjuvantonline.com/index.jsp
● Treatment of discharge of the breast
○ Hadfield’s procedure: duct excision
○ Microdochectomy: removal of the duct by a probe passed into it

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Breast Surgery for Medical Finals

  • 1. Breast Surgery Christiane Riedinger, September 2014 Resources: Path notes, Surgical Talk, Lecture Notes in Clin Surgery
  • 2. TOC ● Clinical Assessment ● Pathology ● Management
  • 4. History ● Symptoms of breast disease ○ Pain ■ Cyclical? => Bilat. can depend on diet (caffeine) Drug Mx: change contraceptive method, danazol, tamoxifen, LHRH analogues ■ Non-cyclical? => Abscess, CA, Tietze’s syndrome*, Herpes Zoster and other chest wall lesions. ○ Discharge ■ Clear Intraductal papilloma (benign) ■ Milky Galactorrhoea ■ Purulent Abscess ■ Multi-coloured Duct ectasia (inflammatory) ■ Blood Intraductal papilloma, CA, Paget’s ○ Lump
  • 5. Breast Tumours: How to describe a lump ● she cuts the fish 3x + PER ○ site, size, surface ○ colour, contour, consistency, compressability/fluctuancy ○ tenderness, temperature, transillumination ○ fluid-filled, fixed (tethering vs. fixation, depth), fields (lymphatic drainage) ○ pulsatile (e.g. aneurysm) ○ expansile ○ reducible/relation to skin, muscle, other structures (hernia/breast lesion) ● Difference between tethering (lesion near fibrous septum or ligaments of Astley Cooper, evident upon elevation of the arms or tension of pec major - dimpling) and fixation (tumour attached to muscle and skin? implies more advanced disease) ● ??????
  • 6. Breast Examination (1) ● Ask about pain ● Be ruthless but polite in terms of exposure for inspection ● General observation ○ General appearance - cachexia, pallor, SOB ○ Signs of previous surgery - wide local excision, mastectomy, reconstruction ○ Signs of infection ○ Nipples ■ Discharge, e.g. lactation, blood (duct ectasia, intraductal papilloma) ■ Rash (e.g. in Paget’s, DCIS underlying nipple, peau d’orange) ■ Inversion/retraction of nipples ■ Accessory nipples (usually below breast), accessory breast tissue (usually in axilla) ○ Supraclavicular area and axilla - swollen, nodes, veins, muscle wasting ● Continue with patient sitting at 45* ● Inspect breasts ○ Ask if pain when moving arms ○ Watch breasts as arms behind head – T4 skin, Astley Cooper* => Tethering? arms behind back – T4 chest wall pec. major => Fixation? ○ = check for invading masses of stage T4 ○ Ask about discharge and ask patient to demonstrate it
  • 7. Breast Examination (2) ● Continue with patient lying flat with hands behind the head ● Cover patient and expose body parts needed ● Check inframammary fold with back of hand ○ Say: “I am now examining under the breast” ○ Most common finding: intertrigo – chronic thrush under breast ● Palpate 5 areas of the breast and axilla and nodes ○ Upper outer quadrant + axilla (most common site of lesions) Hold pt’s R arm with your R arm then palpate axilla with the other hand. Ask patient to lift arm up, place hand in axilla, lift arm down to rest on yours, then roll fingers down axilla 4 times. Examine the left axilla with the left hand and vice versa. If you feel a lump, feel if it is fixed or not. ○ Upper inner quadrant ○ Lower inner quadrant ○ Lower outer quadrant ○ Areolar complex ○ Palpate normal breast first ■ During palpation don’t lift up hand ■ Move all around breast ○ Lymph nodes: Axillary (already done), infraclavicular, supraclavicular, neck ● Cover patient
  • 8. Breast Examination (3) ● PRESENTATION ○ To complete my examination, I’d like to ■ Send off potential discharge for cytology ■ Palpate the liver and ausculate the chest for suspected mestastases ■ Perform a triple assessment ■ Clinical Hx and Ex => done ■ Radiological Mammography and US +/- MRI ■ Pathological Fine needle aspiration => cytology and core biopsy ■ MRI if younger patient or discrepancy between clinical assessment and mammography or when planning breast conserving surgery ○ This lady has a non-tender/tender Xcm lump in the X quadrant of the X breast. It has a XX surface and a XX edge, is mobile/immobile and not/attached to XX. There are XXX palpable in the axilla, continue description as above. There are XXX nodes palpable in the supraclavicular fossa / other sites. My differential diagnosis is XXXX based on the age of the patient, the most likely diagnosis is XXXX.
  • 9. Breast Examination (4) ● Note main DD has 4 choices (Mannequin does not have inflammatory lesion and 2 lumps to palpate, the benign diagnosis depends on age of patient) ○ Fibrocystic lesion ■ Women >30-40 ■ Changes with cycle ○ Benign neoplasm, e.g. fibroadenoma ■ Women <30-40 ■ Changes with cycle ○ Malignant lesion: Peau d’orange, nipple retraction, tethering, fixation, change in breast size, ulceration, Paget’s ■ Painless lump ■ More likely in upper outer quadrant? ○ Inflammatory lesion ■ Usually painful ● DD of breast discharge ○ Ask if spontaneous or on squeezing ○ Orange watery fluid from single duct Intraductal papilloma ○ Bright red blood from single duct Papilloma or malignancy ○ White or green discharge from multiple ducts Benign ○ Bilateral milky discharge Galactorrhoea ● Note on axillary nodes ○ 25% of palpable node will not contain metastases ○ 25% of nodes containing metastases are not palpable
  • 10. Aids to DD ● Have 4 main options for lump (note for exam: mannequin does not have inflammatory option, has 1 palpable benign or malignant lump. Need to distinguish 2 benign conditions by age of the patient) ○ Benign fibroCYSTIC lesion in older women, terminal ducts undergo apoptosis and terminal lobuloaveolar unit produces fluid => cyst ■ Change with cycle ■ Most likely if >>30y and up to menopause ○ Benign FIBROADENOMA = STROMA, “breast mice” ■ Change with cycle ■ Most likely if <~30y!!! Young!!! ○ MALIGNANT tumour ■ Painless lump ○ INFLAMMATORY lesion ■ PAINFUL, potential purulent discharge
  • 12. Breast Tumours: Risk factors ● Age ● Gender - only 15% of breast CA patients have other risk factors ● Inherited trait ● Oe exposure: early menarche, late menopause, no children, children at age of >35y ● OCP (risk returns back to normal) ● HRT (beyond the age of 55), risk returns to normal 5y post stopping, combined Oe/P HRT is worse than Oe only ● Previous benign breast disease: atypical epithelial hyperplasia (fibrocystic lesion) ● Obesity, alcohol intake, NOT smoking!?! (Acc. to surgical talk) ● Radiation exposure, esp. post lymphoma (mantle radiotherapy)
  • 13. Breast Tumours: Overview ● While listing the different pathological types of tumours, think of the different tissues it can originate from ○ Types of breast tissue epithelium (duct vs. lobule) ○ Fibroblasts (stroma) ○ Types of skin epithelium (keratinocytes vs. glands etc..)
  • 14. Benign Breast Tumours/Lesions ● General: Lipoma, sebaceous cyst, hamartoma, sarcoma (rare), 2* mets ● Fibrocystic >>35, perimenopausal, remodelling of breast tissue causing fluid entrapment ○ Non-proliferating cystic changes => cyclical, ASPIRATION AND CYTOLOGY ○ Proliferating: ■ Epithelial hypertrophy ■ Sclerosing adenosis => ● Inflammatory ○ Mastitis (lactating) => ABX, ABSCESS ASPIRATION AND IV ABX, BREASTFEEDING CONTINUATION ○ Non-lactating: piercings => periductal mastitis, fungal in immunosuppressed, granulomatous in sarcoidosis or TB, infective in T2DM, RA => TREAT UNDERLYING CAUSE AND CAUSATIVE AGENT ● Benign ○ Fibroadenoma <<35 (Breast mice) => EXCISION OR NO Rx ○ Phylloides: WLE OR MASTECOMY AS 15% MALIGNANT ○ Intraductal papilloma => EXCISION OR NO Rx
  • 15. Malignant Breast Tumours ● DCIS ● DCIS near nipple = Paget’s disease ● DCIS subtype: comedone ● LCIS ● Invasive ductal NST ● Invasive ductal ○ Lobular ○ Medullary ○ Colloid/Mucinous ○ Tubular ○ Inflammatory ○ Cibriform ○ Micropapillary ○ Apocrine ○ Adenoid ○ Metaplastic ● Invasive LCIS
  • 16.
  • 17. Breast Tumours: Organisation by site ● 50% upper outer quadrant ● 20% central ● 4% bilateral 1* or >1 1* lobular carcinoma invasive ductal carcinoma mucinous carcinoma medullary carcinoma intraductal papillomaPaget’s, DCIS lipoma sebaceous cyst stroma: fibrocystic fibroadenoma phylloides
  • 18. Breast Tumours: Genetic Changes A HER2 -ve slow growing, responds to tamoxifen but not well to chemo OeR +ve = luminal B HER2 +ve double +ve, worse, often node involvement basal-like HER2 -ve, triple -ve, highly aggressive, medullary, BRCA1/2 involved OeR -ve PR -ve HER2+ve HER2 +ve highly proliferative ● 10% genetic predisposition of which 30% BRCA1/2 ● RECEPTORS ○ 30% HER2 upregulated (human epidermal GF = Y kinase) => worse prognosis ○ Oe R present/absent => if present better prognosis ● PROTEINS ○ Ras/Myc upregulated ○ pRb/p53 downregulated ● Classification according to receptor involvement:
  • 20. Screening of Breast Cancer ● 47-73 (after 70 voluntary) ● Every 3y ● 2 view mammogram looking for calcification ● Procedure ○ +ve (abnormal) => core biopsy ■ B1: Normal => return to screening (if biopsy from wrong area rebiopsy) ■ B2: Benign => reassure, return to screening ■ B3: Uncertain malignant potential => excision ■ B4: Suspicion of malignancy => rebiopsy or excision ■ B5: Malignant => surgical excision (WLE or mastectomy) ● B5a - DCIS ● B5b - invasive ○ -ve (normal) => return to screening programme
  • 21. Ix of Breast Disease ● Referral from GP or screening of suspicious lumps or mamogram findings: ● Triple assessment (diagnostic tests) ○ Clinical Hx and Ex ○ Radiological Mammography and US (useful for Ix of lesions already diagnosed, not useful for ab initio identification, also US axilla) ○ Pathological Fine-needle aspiration FNA cytology and core biopsy ■ FNA: cystic lesion disappears on aspiration => diagnosis ■ Core biopsy only performed if suspicion of cancer after FNA ○ MRI if younger patient (high tissue density on mammobraphy) or discrepancy between clinical assessment and mammography or when planning breast conserving surgery ● Other Ix: ○ FBC (potential marrow involvement), LFTs, U&E/CA, CXR, Isotope bone scan, liver US.
  • 22. Ix of Breast Disease: Mammography ● Views ○ Mediolateral-oblique view MLO ○ Craniocaudal view CC ○ Lateromedial/mediolateral view? ● Result suspicious of cancer ○ White asymmetrical spiculated lesion containing microcalcification ○ DCIS: cluster of microcalcification ● Efficiency ○ Misses 7% of palpable cancers and 20% in pre-menopausal women ○ Lobular carcinoma not well detected ● ADD
  • 23. Ix of Breast Disease: Staging ● Staging informs on state of progression and guides treatment ● Assessment for staging ○ Lymph node biopsy ○ CT for metastases ○ Bone scan for metastases ○ CXR for metastases ○ Liver US for metastases ○ Blood tests as before: FBC, LFTs, serum calcium, U&E ● TNM ○ Tx 1* cannot be assessed ○ T0 No evidence of 1* ○ Tis In situ ○ T1 <2cm ○ T2 2-5cm ○ T3 >5cm ○ T4 Chest wall or skin involvement ● Nx Lymph nodes cannot be assessed e.g. if removed ● N0 no involvement ● N1 Movable axillary ● N2 Fixed axillary ● N3 Ipsilateral thoracic nodes ● Mx Cannot be assessed ● M0 No distant mets ● M1 Distant mets
  • 24. Why Stage and Grade ● Grade = biology/histology differentiation ● Stage = anatomy infiltration ● Prognosis guided by ○ grade (incl. node biopsies) ○ stage i
  • 25. Treatment Overview ● Management by MDT: surgeon, oncologist, nurse, radiologist, histopathologist, cytologist, coordinator, +/- plastic surgery, genetics, palliative care Breast care nurse from 1st visit for SUPPORT AND EDUCATION ● Medical ○ Tyrosine kinase inhibitors: HER2 antagonists Herceptin ○ Endocrine treatment: Oe antagonist Tamoxifen pre-menopausal, Arimidex post ● Surgical ○ Excision of the tumour ○ Surgery to axilla ○ +/- Breast reconstruction ● Radiological ● +/- Adjuvant therapy: hormonal, biological or chemotherapy, neo-adjuvant means prior to surgery ● Know local policies and national guidelines ● Consider social circumstances of patient ● Breast care nurse from 1st visit for SUPPORT AND EDUCATION
  • 26. Surgical Treatment of the 1* Tumour ● <4cm ○ Breast-conserving surgery: WLE wide local excision and radiotherapy ○ OR mastectomy ○ Depends on patient choice, 75% chose WLE ● For impalpable tumours ○ Stereotactic localisation under mammographic control ○ Needle is placed in place of microcalcification ○ Area surrounding the needle is excised ○ Excised area X-rayed to confirm it contains the calcifications ● If margins of local excision not clear, re-excision is required ● Treatment of axilla is not normally done in DCIS
  • 27. Treatment of the Axilla ● Aim: Prevent cancer spread and establish prognosis (axillary nodes most important prognostic indicator!) ● Procedures: Sentinel lymph node biopsy SNL 1. Pre-op US with FNA 2. Sentinel node biopsy ● Pre-op intradermal injection of technetium and methylene blue into tumour / periareolar ● Wait 2h ● Find first axillary node draining the cancer, excise and examine. ● Find hot and blue nodes and excise just these 3. If sentinel node +ve for tumour => axillary clearance Axillary sampling 1. Remove >4 nodes and analyse histologically, if any +ve then axillary clearance ● Grades of axillary clearance ○ Axillary sampling Lower part of axillary fatpad, obsolete ○ Level 1 Nodes up to axillary vein ○ Level 2 Nodes up to pec minor ○ Level 3 Nodes up to 1st rib ○ The more, the higher the risk of nerve damage and lymphoedema ● Do NOT perform radiotherapy to a cleared axilla => inc. risk of lymphoedema
  • 28. Surgical Treatment of Breast CA ● Conservation surgery (usually <4cm) ○ Wide local excision WLE, removal of cylinder of breast tissue down to the pectoral muscle ○ Limited axillary surgery ○ Post-operative radiotherapy ● Total simple mastectomy (usually >4cm or too large in small breast or nipple) ○ Removal of breast tissue, nipple and areola +/- axillary surgery ● Skin sparing mastectomy ○ Circular incision around nipple and removal of breast tissue with nipple by diathermy excision through incision, followed by insertion of drainage tubes +/- implants and closure ● Nipple sparing mastectomy with simultaneous reconstruction ● Nipple and areola sparing mastectomy ● Most radical treatment - but no increased survival ○ Radical mastectomy with axillary clearance ○ Post-operative radiotherapy (if >5cm or close to chest wall) ● +/- chemotherapy, endocrine and antibody therapy
  • 29. Breast Reconstruction ● Immediate ● Delayed ○ If significant comorbidity ○ or post-operative radiotherapy ● Becker prosthesis ○ Prosthesis placed under the pectoralis muscle / implant with potential port ○ Simplest procedure ● Autologous reconstruction / tissue flaps, when skin replacement needed ○ Latissimus dorsi ○ DIEP ■ Deep inferior epigastric perforator (a, anastomosed onto inf. mammary a) ■ Only skin and fat flap ○ previously TRAB (now replaced by DIEP) ■ Transverse abdominus, ■ Muscle sacrificed
  • 30. Chemotherapy ● Overall reduces the risk of (distal) recurrence by 20% ● Greatest success in young node + xx ● In each case, assess potential benefits against toxicity (RISK Management!) ● Combination more effective than single agent (single more palliative) ● Six cycles of cytotoxic chemo given 1/m for 6m ● FEC: 5-fluorouracil, epirubicin and cyclophosphamide ● Scoring of toxicity 0-4, 1 can still work, from 2 on cannot continue work ● Side-effects ○ Alopecia (can prevent with scalp cooling) ○ Mouth ulcers ○ Sterility ○ Myelosuppression ○ Extravasation: stop infusion don’t remove! ○ Lethargy ○ Nausea and vomiting ○ Teratogenicity ○ Specific to individual drugs
  • 31. Radiotherapy ● Reduces (local) recurrence but not mortality ● Usually combined with WLE ● 50Gy external beam radiotherapy 5d/w for 3w ● Side-effects ○ Tiredness ○ Skin irritation (~sunburn) from ~week3 ○ Shrinkage of the irradiated breast ● Reduces risk of recurrence from 30% to 5% in 10y
  • 32. Adjuvant Therapy ● Improves survival by 5-10% over 10y ● Oe antagonists / endocrine therapy ○ Usually for 5y if OeR +ve, especially if nodal spread. +/- ovarian ablation ○ Also reduce risk of contralateral breast CA, recurrence, death rate, 5%/10% benefit if node -ve/+ve at 10y ○ Side effects: menopausal-type symptoms (less so with arimidex) ○ Tamoxifen - actually a mixed agonist/antagonist = SERM selective OeR modulator ○ Arimidex = anastrozole - an aromatase inhibitor that blocks peripheral oe production in fat tissues in post-menopausal women where ovaries no longer produce Oe ● Herceptin = Trastuzumab ○ HER2 antibody ○ 25% of breast CA HER2 +ve (i.e. with HER2 overexpression?) ○ Side-effects: cardiomyopathy and congestive cardiac failure ○ Given every 3w for 1y as long as no cardiac problems ○ 3-monthly echocardiograms to monitor (see NICE) ● Neo-adjuvant therapy*** ○ Treat with endocrine and/or cytotoxic drugs prior to surgery to allow shrinkage of the tumour, followed by radiotherapy post-operatively
  • 33. Prognosis ● Predictive factors ○ Node involvement single best predictor of survival! Nr of nodes ~ p of distant mets! ○ Also: size, grade (differentiation), Nottingham Prognostic Index (size, grade and nodes), vascular invasion, hormone R, HER2 R, histo type. ● DCIS >90% 5y ● if recurrence 50% invasive ● <1% death risk ● <2cm 90% 5y ● node -ve 80% 5y ● 16 nodes 50% 5y ● distant mets 15% 5y, life expectancy 2-3y ● metastases to: (LCIS different: CSF, serosal surfaces, GI, ovaries, uterus, bone marrow)
  • 34. Advanced Disease ● Tumour >5cm initial Mx non-surgical: chemotherapy with subsequent surgery +/- radiotherapy ● Sole radiotherapy only if unfit for surgery or very elderly +/- adjuvant ● Metastatic disease: systemic therapy = hormonal, chemotherapy for advanced visceral disease ● Treatment of bone mets ○ Radiotherapy ○ Bisphosphonates ● Treatment of hypercalcaemia due to bone mets ○ Hydration with IV saline ○ Diuretics ○ Bisphosphonates (inhibit Ras farnesylation and osteoclast proliferation) ● Palliative care ○ Treat pain and other symptoms of advanced disease
  • 35. Additional Info https://www.adjuvantonline.com/index.jsp ● Treatment of discharge of the breast ○ Hadfield’s procedure: duct excision ○ Microdochectomy: removal of the duct by a probe passed into it