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Published byViolet Osborne Modified over 6 years ago
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Case 3 Jane McNicholas Consultant Oncoplastic Breast Surgeon
East Lancashire Hospitals
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Case 3 74 year old woman presents with lump in left breast she noticed 2 weeks ago In past, was on HRT for 7 years No FH of breast cancer Otherwise fit and well
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Case 3 On examination - 2cm mass in left breast, hard, discrete, feels malignant. No axillary nodes to feel - P5 Mammogram - 2cm mass in left breast - M5 Ultrasound - 22mm lesion in breast - U5 Ultrasound of axilla - normal FNA - malignant cells - M5 Core Biopsy - Invasive Ductal Cancer, Grade 2 - B5b
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Case 3 What do you offer the patient?
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Case 3 WLE + SLNB Mastectomy + SLNB
Axillary node clearance only if SLNB shows metastatic disease Post-op radiotherapy? Post-op chemotherapy? Endocrine therapy?
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Case 3 Patient chooses WLE and SLNB
Post op histology - 19mm Grade 2 Invasive Ductal Cancer, fully excised. No evidence of lymphovascular invasion. 0/4 lymph nodes ER - 8/8, PR - 7/8, Her2 - -ve What is her NPI?
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Nottingham Prognostic Index
Score 1 2 3 Grade Lymph nodes 1-3 4+ NPI = Grade + Lymph Nodes + (Size (cm) x0.2)
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Nottingham Prognostic Index
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Case 3 NPI = (1.9 x 0.2) = 3.38 Puts patient into a good prognosis group Post-operative MDT recommended radiotherapy and endocrine therapy (Aromatase inhibitor)
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Reasons for Mastectomy
Patient choice Large tumour in relation to breast size Previous breast conserving surgery with radiotherapy Multi-focal disease Unable to have radiotherapy (unable to lie flat, unable to raise arm, pacemaker with left sided tumour Patients with collagen vascular diseases Central breast tumour - No longer a valid reason
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Post-op Radiotherapy Always given after WLE - local recurrence rate unacceptably high if not given (i.e 25% in 10 years) Given after mastectomy in patients thought to be at higher risk of local recurrence (i.e. close to chest wall, large tumour, vascular invasion, etc
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Post-op Chemotherapy Given to patients at high risk of disease recurrence/progression Usually node positive, large tumour, adverse histological features, oestrogen receptor negative, herceptin positive Traditionally given up to 70, but this is changing - over 70 given in many more cases if fit enough
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Endocrine Therapy Given to patients who are Oestrogen Receptor positive First used was Tamoxifen. Side effects include hot flushes (50%), increased thrombo-embolic risk, increased risk of endometrial cancer Newer agents more widely used now - Anastrozole (Arimidex), Letrozole (Femara) and Exemestane (Aromasin). Side effects are hot flushes (30%) and reduced bone mineral density
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HRT and Breast Cancer The Million Women Study is the largest study looking at HRT usage and breast cancer risk It found that taking HRT for 5 years increased the risk of breast cancer This increased risk was for Oestrogen only and Combined Preparations but Combined preparations had a greater risk
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