Breast Tumors

From WikiLectures

Ductal carcinoma of the breast
Lobular carcinoma of the breast
Paget disease
Paget disease

It is one of the most common tumors ever. They form two basic groups:

  1. Benigntumor;
  2. Malignanttumor.

Benign breast tumors[edit | edit source]

Find more information on Benign breast disease.

Malignant tumors of the breast[edit | edit source]

They represent the most common malignant tumors in women in the Czech Republic, their incidence is still rising.

Epidemiology[edit | edit source]

  • Although the incidence is increasing, the mortality is not, because they are diagnosed at earlier stages;
  • Maximum incidence is around 57 years;
  • In men it occurs in a ratio of 1:140.

Etiology[edit | edit source]

Risk factors:[edit | edit source]

  1. Length of exposure to estrogens – early menarche , late menopause , nulliparity;
  2. Other breast diseases – cystic adenomas , ductal papillomas (risk of overlooking cancer);
  3. Effects of ionizing radiation – including mammography ;
  4. Obesity , increased fat intake and lack of exercise;
  5. The influence of smoking, chemical substances, hormonal contraception has not been clearly documented.

Clinical manifestations[edit | edit source]

Macroscopically visible lump on the breast, deformity and indentation of the nipple
  • Most often it is a palpable painless lump in the breast (in 75% it is the first manifestation of the disease);
  • However, it would be optimal to find a non-palpable lesion on mammography;
  • Other symptoms (less often) – breast pain (5%), breast enlargement (1%), indentation of the skin or nipple (5%), discharge (2%), surface changes on the nipple (1%);
  • Enlargement of axillary nodes - regional spread;
  • At an advanced stage – bone pain, weight loss,...
  • Paraneoplasiadermatomyositis , neuromuscular syndrome, acanthosis nigrans , hypercalcemia in bone metastases.

Diagnostics[edit | edit source]

Clinical examination:[edit | edit source]

  • Careful personal, family and gynecological anamnesis ;
  • Look - symmetry of the breasts, movements with breathing, regularity of the nipple, color of the skin, expansion of the veins can indicate the activity of the tumor;
  • Palpation – systematically all quadrants, magnitude of resistance, mobility, boundaries, consistency;
  • Frequency of cancer findings in individual quadrants – most often HZK (47%), nipple (22%) and HVK (14%), lower quadrants only a few;
  • Palpation of nodes axillary, above the clavicle.

Display methods:[edit | edit source]

Find more detail on Diagnostic display methods in senology.

  • Mammography has a dominant position – the yield is up to 90%;
    • Finding – microcalcifications are often visible, a solid deposit with jagged edges;
    • USG – usually complementary to mammography, has high sensitivity (95%) but limited specificity, is preferred in women under 40;
    • CT , MRI , less – ductography , PET .

Biochemical examination:[edit | edit source]

  • standard - liver tests , urea , creatinine , electrolytes, ...
  • tumor markers – CEA, CA 15-3, TPA;
  • Determination of hormonal receptors is of particular importance - immunohistochemically in a tissue section; the effect of estrogen and progesterone on tumor growth is assumed
  • Molecular biology – mainly determination of HER-2/neu – causes increased proliferative activity (prognostic and predictive significance);
  • Biopsy - fine needle aspiration (FNA) - more important for distinguishing between cystic and solid formation;
  • Histology is only possible with a self-cutting needle (core biopsy) under anesthesia (local or general).

Screening:[edit | edit source]

  • early diagnosis is the basis of successful treatment;
  • mammographic screening for women aged 45 and over (once every two years))[1].

Histopathology[edit | edit source]

  • Cancer most often arises from the terminal lobules of the gland or from the ducts (TDLU - terminal ductal lobular unit);
  • It is usually preceded by a non-invasive form – carcinoma in situ .

Carcinoma in situ[edit | edit source]

  • Lobular carcinoma in situ - from the cells of the mammary lobules, proliferation of cells in the lobules that dilate;
    • Not detectable mammographically (unlike the previous one);
    • It often arises multicentrically, even in the contralateral breast;
    • More common in premenopausal women.
  • Ductal carcinoma in situ – proliferation of ductal epithelium without crossing the basement membrane, can create microcalcifications (detected mammographically), can turn into invasive ductal carcinoma;
    • A special form is Paget's carcinoma of the nipple - when tumor cells from the ducts invade the nipple, more often in postmenopausal women.

Invasive forms of carcinomas[edit | edit source]

  • There are different forms, infiltrating is divided into 2 forms - lobular and ductal.
Lobular
  • About 10%, often in the HZK (upper outer quadrant);
  • It often metastasizes to the serous membranes, meninges, to the ovary, retroperitoneally.
Ductal
  • The most common (75%), it often has a tubular arrangement, it is accompanied by reactive fibrosis – the tumor has a so-called scirrhotic form, when it is hard as a rock;
  • Metastasizes to bones, liver and lungs;
Inflammatory (erysipeloid) carcinoma
  • Rarely (1–3%), the most aggressive form;
  • Infiltration of the entire breast, diffuse erythema, induration of the skin (typical orange peel appearance);
  • 50-70% of tumors have nodal metastases at the time of diagnosis.

Therapy[edit | edit source]

The definitive treatment procedure is the result of a joint decision of the multidisciplinary team.

Surgical treatment[edit | edit source]

  • Since 1882, radical mastectomy with exenteration of the axilla has been performed (pectoral muscles, nerves, etc. were removed);
  • Today, a modified radical mastectomy is performed more often - the breast is separated from the pectoral muscle fascia, the nodes are removed from the superficial layers, the nodes below the pectoralis minor muscle are usually not removed;
  • Another option – sentinel node ;
  • conservative procedures – quadrantectomy, tumorectomy ;
    • It is necessary to supplement with radiotherapy , reconstructive surgery is performed;
  • Also as a modality of hormonal treatment – ​​ovariectomy ;
  • In BRCA, surgery can also be used as prophylaxis.

Radiotherapy[edit | edit source]

  • Carcinoma has limited radiosensitivity;
  • It is indicated after conservative operations, the result is then the same as ablation;
  • It is therefore given adjuvantly;
  • Brachyradiotherapy – application of iridium wires;
  • Palliative treatment – ​​for bone metastases.

Chemotherapy[edit | edit source]

  • Breast cancer is relatively sensitive to a number of cytostatics , mainly a combination is used;
  • The basic combination is CFM – cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, 5-FU, or a combination with anthracyclines;
  • Monotherapy – in elderly women with limited marrow reserve;
  • Adjuvantly - before menopause, always when the nodes are affected, it is not given for carcinoma in situ or for tumors smaller than 1 cm;
  • Neoadjuvant – for extensive tumors;
  • Palliation – the main treatment method for disseminated disease, can greatly extend survival time.

Hormonal treatment[edit | edit source]

  • Adjuvantly, neoadj. also palliatively;
  • In premenopausal – castration – surgical or pharmacological.
  • SERM - Tamoxifen
  • Aromatase inhibitors - reduction of the synthesis of female sex hormones

Biological treatment[edit | edit source]

  • Inhibition of membrane receptors – Ig against HER-2/neu receptors– Herceptin.


Links[edit | edit source]

related articles[edit | edit source]

External links[edit | edit source]

BENEŠ, Jiří. Study materials [online]. [cit. 2018-01-06]. <http://jirben2.chytrak.cz/>.

Reference[edit | edit source]