Breast Imaging Flashcards

1
Q

what is a mammogram?

A

X ray

mainstay of breast imaging

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2
Q

views on mammogram?

A

oblique and Craniocaudal (CC)

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3
Q

where do most cancers occur?

A

upper outer quadrant

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4
Q

how does breast density change across lifetime?

A

density reduces as you get older

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5
Q

how does density affect risk of breast cancer?

A

more dense = higher risk?

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6
Q

advantages of mammography?

A

images whole of both breasts
sensitive for detecting DCIS and invasive cancer
only screening known to reduce population mortality

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7
Q

calcification on mammogram?

A

fine bright white specks

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8
Q

drawbacks of mammography?

A
ionising radiation (can induce a cancer)
can be uncomfortable
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9
Q

what is tomosynthesis?

A
3D mammography (many slices, almost like a CT of the breast)
increased sensitivity
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10
Q

conrast enhanced spectral mammography?

A

shows contrast enhancement in the breast after IV iodine contrast
low energy image
high energy image
subtraction image (take 1 away from the other so only the parts that are enhancing are left behind)

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11
Q

breast US is best used in which cases?

A

symptomatic cancer (palpable lump)
can further investigate lesion shown on mammogram
image guided biopsy
breast inflammation/abscesses (can be used in draining)
breast problems in pregnancy

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12
Q

advanatages of US?

A
no ionising radiation
not uncomfortable
good sensitivity and specificity for invasive cancer
cant show DCIS
quick
can differentiate cystic from solid
cheap and easy
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13
Q

advanced US technologies?

A

contrast enhanced

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14
Q

elastography?

A

medical imaging modality that maps the elastic properties and stiffness of soft tissue. The main idea is that whether the tissue is hard or soft

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15
Q

problems with strain elastography?

A

non-quantitive

poor reproducibility

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16
Q

shear wave elastography?

A

strain produced by the US probe (shear waves)

….

17
Q

why are breast cancers stiff?

A

collagen in stroma around the tumour

  • organised in normal
  • disorganised and poorly aligned in cancerous
18
Q

stiffness in types of breast cancer from most to least?

A

lobular > ductal > papillary > tubular

19
Q

MRI in breast cancer?

A

most sensitive imaging for breast cancer diagnosis and sizing
(contrast enhanced = 95% sensitive)

20
Q

problems with MRI?

A

almost too good
will show tiny foci away from main lesion which will have to be biopsied and will result in a mastectomy when a wide local incision would otherwise be sufficient (other systemic cancer treatments would actually mop up these tiny foci but if they’re seen they have to be taken out)

21
Q

when is MRI used?

A

lobular cancers
if cancer cant be seen on mammography
if cancer is thought to be bigger than shown on other imaging
pagets disease of the nipple
down sizing of tumour with neoadjuvant chemotherapy (before surgery)
good at showing that the tumour is gone
positive axillary node biopsy but normal mammogram and US
breast implant integrity (intracapsular rupture etc)
screening in very high risk women

22
Q

pagets?

A

invasion of the nipple by DCIS

23
Q

which type of curve on MRI enhancement (Kuhl enhancement) indicates cancer?

A

type 3 “washout pattern”

has a relatively rapid uptake and shows reduction in enhancement towards the latter part of the study

24
Q

types of biopsy?

A

FNA (rarely used anymore)
core needle (most common)
vacuum
stereotactic biopsy (mammogram guided, type of core?)

25
Q

commonest causes of breast lump by age?

A
<30 = fibroadenoma
30-50 = cyst
>50 = cancer
26
Q

why cant menopausal women get cysts?

A

need oestrogen in system to form cysts

27
Q

best imaging modality to assess breast mass?

A

US

  • greyish = solid
  • black hole = cyst
28
Q

spiculate masses are likely to be what?

A

cancer

29
Q

when is axillary US done?

A

can show metastases in breast cancer

abnormal nodes identified by cortical thickness and shape

30
Q

how is breast cancer staged?

A
only local staging for operable breast cancer
use CT (chest, abdo and pelvis) to look for mets in locally advanced disease
31
Q

when is nipple discharge worrying?

A

unilateral single duct

bloody etc

32
Q

what can cause breast abscess/infection?

A

lactation

duct ectasia

33
Q

when is screening done?

A

every 3 years in women aged 50-70

34
Q

who gets screening?

A

annual mammogram in women over 40 who have a moderate family history
MRI done in people with BRCA gene or with risk equal to BRCA gene