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Updated: Oct 20 2022

Breast Cancer General

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  • Snapshot
    • A 46-year-old woman presents to her primary care physician after discovering a lump in her left breast. She denies any breast pain or nipple discharge. Physical exam reveals a 2 cm firm, fixed mass in the left breast in the upper outer quadrant with no axillary lymphadenopathy.
  • Introduction
    • Overview
      • second most common cancer (after lung cancer)
      • most common cause of cancer-related death in adult women
        • 12% lifetime risk
  • Epidemiology
    • Incidence
      • 260,000 cases per year
      • most common in the elderly
      • 50% of all breast cancer occurs in woman > 65 years of age
      • 20% among women < 50 years of age
      • 2% in women < 30 of age
    • Risk factors
      • increasing age
      • breast cancer in first-degree relatives or mother with breast cancer
      • a low fiber, high fat diet
      • obesity
      • history of contralateral breast cancer
      • a history of endometrial cancer which is also a estrogen induced cancer
      • prior radiation
      • increased number of menstrual cycles or exposure to estrogen
        • nulliparity
        • early menarche (< 11 years of age)
        • late menopause (> 50 years of age)
        • late first pregnancy (> 30 years of age)
        • hormone replacement therapy
      • physical/anatomic risk factors include (CHAFED LIPS)
        • Cancer in breast
        • Hyperplasia
        • Atypical hyperplasia
        • Female
        • Elderly
        • DCIS
        • LCIS
        • Inherited genes
        • Papilloma
        • Sclerosing adenitis
    • Prevention
      • smoking cessation
      • alcohol cessation
      • exercise
      • breastfeeding
  • ETIOLOGY
    • Genetics
      • BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations associated with multiple/early onset breast and ovarian cancer
  • Classification
    • Benign breast tumors
      • intraductal papilloma
        • bloody nipple discharge
    • Carcinoma in situ
      • LCIS
        • not a premalignant lesion but considered a risk factor for breast cancer
      • DCIS
        • a premalignancy
        • 50% develop into invasive ductal carcinoma
      • Paget disease
        • breast itching, crusting, and scaling
        • > 80% associated with underlying breast cancer
        • spreads lymphatically
        • often transforms into invasive ductal carcinoma within 1 year
    • Invasive carcinoma
      • invasive lobular carcinoma
      • invasive ductal carcinoma
      • inflammatory carcinoma
      • phylloides tumor
        • 85-90% are benign
        • may grow aggressively and recur locally
  • Presentation
    • History
      • asymptomatic with recent screening mammography
      • felt a breast lump
    • Symptoms
      • asymptomatic
      • breast lump
      • nipple discharge
        • especially bloody, unilateral
    • Physical exam
      • firm immobile, painless lump
        • most often in upper/outer quadrant
      • skin changes (redness, ulcerations, edema, and nodularity)
        • skin retraction indicates involvement of Cooper ligament
      • axillary lymohadenopathy
        • more advanced cases
      • breast skin edema with dimpling (peau d'orange)
        • represents obstruction of the lymphatics cancer
        • poorer prognosis
  • Imaging
    • Mammography
      • indications
        • screening
          • less effective in young women
            • dense breast tissue in young woman interferes with specificity and sensitivity
          • most effective in postmenopausal patients because of less glandular breast
          • all women aged 50-74 should have mammograms every 1-2 years
            • some recommend screening as early as age 40
            • if first-degree relative with cancer then begin screening ten years before family member developed cancer
          • screening for patients with breast implants is the same as general population
        • diagnosis
          • first step in work-up
            • patients > 30 years of age
            • bloody nipple discharge
            • recurrent cyst
            • 10-15% of palpable cancers are not detected on mammography
        • findings
          • mass
          • calcifications
            • present in 60% of cancers
          • follow up with core needle biopsy
    • Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
      • indications
        • high risk women
          • prior radiation
          • BRCA gene mutation
      • findings
        • breast mass
    • Ultrasound
      • indications
        • patients < 30 years of age
        • cystic mass
          • follow up with fine needle aspiration
  • Tumor, Node, Metastasis (TNM) Staging
    • Staging is done with the TNM system and imaging (CT/bone scan)
    • Most important prognostic factor
      • TNM Staging
      • Nodes
      • None
      • Mobile Axillary
      • Fixed Axillary
      • Distant Mets
      • Size
      • > 5 cm
      •   Stage IIB
      •   Stage IIIA
      •   Stage IIIA
      •   Stage IV
      • 2-5 cm
      •   Stage IIA
      •   Stage IIB
      •   Stage IIIA
      • Stage IV
      • < 2 cm
      •   Stage I
      •   Stage IIA
      •   Stage IIIA
      • Stage IV
  • Studies
    • Serum calcium level
      • may be elevated
    • Alkaline phosphatase
      • elevation may indicate metastasis
    • Hormone receptor tests
      • estrogen
      • progesterone
      • Her-2/neu
  • Differential
    • Benign breast mass
      • fibroadenoma
        • most common mass
        • especially common in younger women
      • fat necrosis injury
        • hardening of breast tisue secondary to injury to the breast
      • intraductal papilloma
        • bloody discharge
    • Other cancer
      • breast sarcoma
      • lymphoma
        • painless unilateral breast mass in an older woman
  • Treatment
    • Medical
      • chemotherapy
        • indications
          • presence of metastases
          • neoadjuvant chemotherapy prior to surgery
          • target therapy for hormone receptor positive (ER and PR) and HER-2/neu oncogene
            • trastuzamab
              • adjuvant for HER-2/neu-positive cancer
              • associated with reversible dilated cardiomyopathy
      • endocrine therapy
        • indications
          • ER/PR receptor positive tumor
      • radiation
        • indications
          • induction therapy to reduce initial tumor burden prior to surgery
          • following lumpectomy to destroy any residual tumor cells
    • Surgical
      • lumpectomy
        • indications
          • smaller tumors
          • patients with strong preference for breast conservation
        • followed by radiation therapy
      • mastectomy
        • indications
          • larger tumors
          • prior history of chest radiation
          • patients who desire mastectomy
        • risk of nerve injury
          • thoracodorsal nerve
            • causes weak adduction and internal rotation
          • long thoracic nerve
            • causes winged scapula
          • intercostobrachial nerve
            • most common nerve injured
            • causes reduced sensation to upper medial arm
  • Prognosis
    • Dependent on stage and type
      • triple negative (estrogen receptor (ER)/progesterone receptor (PR)-negative, HER2-neu-negative) has worse prognosis
    • 40,000 deaths per year
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