pathology of the breast Flashcards

1
Q

what are examples of benign breast conditions ?

A

fibrocystic change - fibrosis, adenosis, cysts
fibroadenoma - circumscribed small nodule at reproductive age
intraduct papilloma - lactiferous ducts, nipple discharge
fat necrosis - traumatic
duct ectasia - nipple discharge

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2
Q

what is the most common breast tumour in young women ?

A

fibroadenoma

proliferation of epithelial and stroll elements
well circumscribed, freely mobile, non painful mass

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3
Q

what are examples of other adenomas ?

A

tubular adenoma - less common, freely movable

lactating adenoma - enlarging during lactation/pregnancy, prominent secretory change

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4
Q

what are features of intraduct papilloma ?

A

usually middle aged women
nipple discharge

epithelial hyperplasia

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5
Q

what are features of fat necrosis ?

A
simulate carcinoma
history of trauma, prior surgery
histiocytes with foamy cytoplasm
lipid-filled cysts
fibrosis, calcifications, egg shell on mammography
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6
Q

what is Phyllodes tumour ?

A

fleshy tumour, leaf like pattern and cysts on cut surface
circumscribed, connective tissue and epithelial elements
less than 1% of breast tumours
can be benign or malignant
heamatogenous metastases

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7
Q

what does a mammogram of a breast carcinoma look like ?

A

soft tissue opacity

microcalcification

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8
Q

what is macroscopically seen with breast carcinoma ?

A

hard lump
fixed mass
tethering to skin
peau d’orange dimpling

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9
Q

what are risk factors for breast carcinoma ?

A
gender
age
menstrual history 
age at first pregnancy
radiation
FHx
personal history
HRT
genetics
obesity, lack of activity, alcohol
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10
Q

what genes are attributed to breast cancer ?

A
BRCA1 20-40%
BRCA2 10-30%
TP53 <1%
PTEN <1%
other
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11
Q

what are the different histological classifications of breast carcinoma ?

A

non-invasive;
ductal carcinoma in situ
lobular carcinoma in situ

invasive;
invasive ductal carcinoma
invasive lobular carcinoma

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12
Q

what is an in situ carcinoma ?

A
preinvasive - no palpable tumour
not detected clinically - only Xray
multicenticity and bilaterality LCIS
no metastatic spread
risk of invasion dependent on grade
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13
Q

what is the risk of progression in situ carcinoma ?

A

low grade DCIS - 30% in 15 years
high grade DCIS - 50% in 8 years
LCIS - 19% in 25 years

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14
Q

what are special types of histological classification ?

A

tubular carcinoma
mucinous carcinoma
carcinoma with medullary features
metaplastic carcinoma

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15
Q

how do you diagnose breast carcinoma ?

A
clinical examination
mammogram
USS
MRI
FNA cytology
needle core biopsy
wide local excision with adequate margins
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16
Q

how does the breast screening programme work ?

A

women aged 50-70
mammogram every 3 years

30% mortality reduction

17
Q

what are microcalcifications ?

A

tiny deposits of calcium can show up anywhere in breast
most women have one or more areas and majority are harmless
small percentage may be precancerous/cancerous

18
Q

what information is included in histology report of an excised tumour ?

A
invasive vs noninvasive
histological type
size
margins
lymph nodes
estrogen/progesterone receptors
HER-2
19
Q

where does breast cancer spread ?

A

local - skin, pectoral muscle
lymphatic - axillary, internal mammary nodes
blood - bones, lungs, liver, brain

20
Q

how do you manage breast cancer ?

A
staging
surgery 
radiotherapy
antihormonal therapy - tamoxifen
chemotherapy
21
Q

what is Paget’s disease of the nipple ?

A

result of intraepithelial spread of intraductal carcinoma

large pale-staining cells within the epidermis of the nipple

22
Q

what are symptoms/signs of Paget’s disease of the nipple ?

A

pain or itching
scaling and redness
looks like eczema

ulceration, crusting, serous or bloody discharge