30. Breasts and Lumps Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main breast differentials for a lump?

A

Fibroadenoma
Fibrocystic disease
Cyst
Cancer

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2
Q

How would a fibroadenoma present?

A

A non-tender lump that is mobile, smooth.

Often in those <30

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3
Q

How do we treat and manage a fibroadenoma?

A

USS, rescan 3-6 months for growth.
Biopsy if large.

<4cm then leave it (shrink on own)
>4cm or rapidly enlarging then surgical excision

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4
Q

How does fibrocystic disease present?

A

Lumpy breasts that are painful.
Changes with menstrual cycle - worse pre-menstruation.
Child-bearing age
May be discharge

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5
Q

How do we manage fibrocystic disease?

A

Supportive - educate, supportive bra, reduce sodium and caffeine
Analgesia

If breast pain severe then hormonal therapy e.g. tamoxifen

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6
Q

How would a breast cyst present?

A

Child-bearing age
Well circumscribed mass
Sudden enlargement
Fluctuant

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7
Q

Management of cyst?

A

Large and painful? USS guided aspiration

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8
Q

What are the main differentials for breast discharge?

A

Duct ectasia
Ductal papilloma
Cancer

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9
Q

What is duct ectasia and how does it present?

A

Dilation of breast ducts that become blocked, fluid builds up.
Perimenopausal women.
Nipple has slit-like retraction
Tender lump around areola +/- green discharge

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10
Q

How do we manage duct ectasia?

A

Conservative - warm compress and abx

Surgical - microdochetomy, total duct excision

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11
Q

How would a ductal papilloma present?

A

Clear or blood-stained discharge, rarely a lump

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12
Q

Investigations for a ductal papilloma?

A

Imaging - MMG, USS
Galactogram - dye injected into the nipple duct + x-ray
Biopsy

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13
Q

Management of a ductal papilloma?

A

Depends on size, number, associated sinister findings

Surgery - microdochectomy

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14
Q

Differentials for breast erythema/pain?

A

Mastitis

Breast abscess

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15
Q

What is mastitis and presentations?

A
Inflammation of the breast. 
Coryzal symptoms
Nipple discharge
Red/tender breast
Possible abscess
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16
Q

How to treat mastitis?

A

Non-severe - warm compress and analgesia

Severe (nipple fissure, not improving, breast milk culture +ve) - flucloxacillin and analgesia

17
Q

How does a breast abscess present and how do we treat it?

A

Localised area of infection, walled off with pus.
May be associated with mastitis

Managed with drainage, culture, abx and analgesia

18
Q

Five main types of breast cancer?

A

Invasive ductal carcinoma
Invasive lobular carcinoma
Ductal carcinoma in-situ (stays in ducts)
Lobular carcinoma in-situ (stays in lobes)
Paget’s disease of the nipple

19
Q

Paget’s disease of breast presentation?

A
Itching/burning/pain in or around nipple
Flattening
Discharge
Lump
Only one breast

Often alongside breast cancer

20
Q

How would we manage breast cancer?

A

Node clearance if axillary lymphadenopathy
Mastectomy if central/large/pt preferred/multifocal
Wide local excision for solitary/peripheral/small lesion
Radiotherapy adjuvant
Biologics

21
Q

What biologics can we give to breast cancer patients depending on their hormonal receptors?

A

ER +ve

  • pre/peri menopausal - tamoxifen
  • post-menopausal - anastrazole, letrozole

Her2 +ve
- Trastuzumab

22
Q

How often and who do we screen for breast cancer?

A

50-70 y/o

Mammogram every 3 years