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Malignant Breast Disease
Juhi Asad, DO Alison Estrabrook, MD Dept. of Breast Surgery
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Breast Cancer Over 180,000 new cases ~62,000 are in situ (30%)
2nd leading cause of all cancer deaths 80% of cases occur >50yo In situ cases have stablized since late 1990s due to early detection~40,000 deaths will occur due to breast cancer in 2007
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Pre-op History Physical Imaging Diagnosis Treatment options
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Surgical Options Partial Mastectomy (lumpectomy) Total Mastectomy
Reconstruction Sentinel lymph node biopsy Axillary lymph node dissection
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Surgical Treatment Partial Mastectomy Radiation therapy Free margins
Aesthetic results NSABP B-06 no significant difference in survival between MRM, lump w/radiaton, and lump w/o radiation
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Partial Mastectomy Contraindications Size relative to breast
Multifocality Early pregnancy Inability to receive radiation Connective tissue disease Prior radiation
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Surgical Treatment Radial Mastectomy Historical – mid 70s
Breast, pectoralis, regional lymph nodes along axillary vein to costoclavicular ligament
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Surgical Treatment Total Mastectomy axillary dissection
TM + Skin sparing w/reconstruction
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Reconstruction Implants Flaps TRAM Latissimus DIEP
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Tissue Expanders
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TRAM
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Oncoplastic Surgery
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Preop Days Postop
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Surgical Treatment Sentinel Node Biopsy
The 1st node in the ipsilateral axilla to drain the tumor >97% concordance rate
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Sentinel Lymph Node Contraindications Clinically positive lymph nodes
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Sentinel Lymph Node Technetium-99m sulfur colloid Isosulfan blue dye
Intradermal : peritumoral or periareolar Isosulfan blue dye Intraparenchymal Problems: Anaphylactic reaction (1-3%) Skin discoloration Contraindicated in pregnancy
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Sentinel Lymph Node Intra-op evaluation
Frozen section Touch prep Benefits over axillary node dissection more accurate pathology less lymphedema – ( very rare vs 10-50%) less sensory disturbances less shoulder dysfunction less wound infection less incisional pain
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Axillary Lymph Node Dissection
Indications Clinically + nodes + SLN Level I & II
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Pathology DCIS Invasive Ductal Invasive Lobular
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DCIS 200% b/w 1983-1992 15-30% all screen-detected tumors Diagnosis
Screening mammogram Microcalcifications Linear, heterogenous Biopsy Stereotactic Open biopsy
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DCIS Treatment Partial Mastectomy Total mastectomy
Followed by radiation +/- hormonal therapy Total mastectomy Diffuse disease Multifocal Persistent positive margins Inability to give radiation Patient choice
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DCIS Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy Total Mastectomy Palpable mass
Microinvasion
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DCIS Radiation Therapy Hormonal Therapy 50% decrease in recurrence LE
NSABP B-24 – LE, RT, +TAM vs LE, RT only TAM – 8.2% incidence of IBTR Placebo – 13.4% incidence of IBTR
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Invasive Ductal Ca Most common – 50-70% of invasive ca
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Invasive Lobular Ca 10-15% of breast ca Fail to form masses
Multifocal and multicentric Bilateral – 20-29%
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ILC
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Staging Primary Tumor (T) TX: unable to assess
T0: no evidence of primary tumor Tis: DCIS, LCIS or Paget’s (nipple only) T1: <2cm T2: 2cm-5cm T3: >5cm T4: extension
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Regional Lymph Nodes (N)
NX: unable to assess N0: negative N1: 1-3 nodes N2: 4-9 nodes N3: >10 nodes
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Distant metastatsis: (M)
MX: unable to assess M0: negative M1: distant mets
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AJCC Staging Stage 0 Stage I Stage IIA Stage IIB Stage IIIA Stage IIIB
Tis, N0, M0 Stage I T1*, N0, M0 Stage IIA T0, N1, M0 T1*, N1, M0 T2, N0, M0 Stage IIB T2, N1, M0 T3, N0, M0 Stage IIIA T0, N2, M0 T1*, N2, M0 T2, N2, M0 T3, N1, M0 T3, N2, M0 Stage IIIB T4, N0, M0 T4, N1, M0 T4, N2, M0 Stage IIIC** Any T, N3, M0 Stage IV Any T, Any N, M1 [Note: T1 includes T1mic]
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5 year Survival Stage 5-year Relative Survival Rate 100% I IIA 92% IIB
100% I IIA 92% IIB 81% IIIA 67% IIIB 54% IV 20%
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Adjuvant Therapy www.adjuvantonline.com
Assess the risks and benefits of additional therapy after surgery
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Prognostic Indicators
Hormone Receptors – improved prognosis ER – 70-80% PR – indicator for a functional ER receptor Epidermal growth factor HER/erbB2 EGFR HER2/neu Cell proliferation & differentiation erbB2
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Prognostic Indicators
P53 – tumor suppressor gene Overexpression of p53 Poorer prognosis Shorter disease-free and survival
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Oncotype Dx ER (+); node (-) Genetic profile – 21 gene assay
Recurrence score (3 groups) Low – hormonal therapy Intermediate – TailorRx trial Hormonal vs chemo + hormonal High – chemo + hormonal therapy
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Adjuvant Therapy Hormonal therapy Antiestrogen therapy – Tamoxifen
Pre & post-menopausal women Reduces risk of contralateral disease & mets Side effects Endometrial ca Thromoembolic events
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Adjuvant Therapy Hormonal Therapy
Aromastase Inhibitors – blocks the conversion of androstenedione to estrone Post-menopausal women ATAC trial – anastrozole decreased the risk of contralateral cancers compared to TAM Side effects Bone loss and joint pain
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Adjuvant Therapy Chemotherapy Size of tumor Nodal status ER/PR
HER2/Neu -- Herceptin
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Node (-) & ER/PR (+) & T<1cm & HER2 (-) & no LVI
Low Risk Node (-) & ER/PR (+) & T<1cm & HER2 (-) & no LVI -- Hormonal therapy -- consider Oncotype Intermediate Risk Node (-) & at least 1 of the following T>2cm grade II/III LVI <35 yo HER2 (+) Node + (1-3) & HER2 (-) ER/PR (+) -- OncotypeDX -- hormonal therapy -- Chemo & hormonal therapy ER/PR (-) -- Chemo High Risk Node + (1-3) & HER2 + Node +(>4) -- Chemo & hormone
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LCIS Incidental finding Marker for an increased risk
0.8-8% of breast biopsies Marker for an increased risk 1% per year risk Bilateral breasts Most common – Ductal carcinoma
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LCIS Treatment Annual mammograms 6mos CBE
Discuss bilateral prophylactic mastectomies
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Paget’s Disease Chronic, eczema-like rash of the nipple and areolar skin ~97% underlying Ca Diagnosis Punch biopsy Core needle biopsy
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Paget’s Disease Treatment Surgical treatment Adjuvant therapy
TM w/ SLN Central segmentectomy w/ SLN XRT Adjuvant therapy Chemotherapy Hormonal therapy
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Locally Advanced Disease
Large tumors (>5cm) Chest wall involvment Ulcerations Fixed axillary lymph nodes
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Locally Advanced Disease
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Locally Advanced Disease
Treatment Neoadjuvant therapy – 80% shrinkage Downstage BCT vs Mastectomy radiation
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Post Neoadjuvant therapy
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Inflammatory Breast Ca
Rare & aggressive Accounts for 5% of all breast ca Younger women higher tendency for distant mets AJCC – T4d Stage IIIB Stage IIIC Stage IV
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Inflammatory Breast Ca
Presentation Rapid onset of erythema, edema (peau d’orange Often no mass Axillary node involvement Imaging No distinct mass Skin thickening Trabecular thickening
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Inflammatory Breast Ca
Histology Dermal lymphatic invasion Not associated with a subtype High S-phase fraction Mutation of p53
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Inflammatory Breast Ca
Survival 3yr – 40-70% 5 yr – 50% 10 yr – 26.7%
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Male Breast Cancer 1% of all breast ca >90% Ductal Ca ER/PR +
5-10% are hereditary BRCA 2 gene
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Breast CA during Pregnancy
1 in 3,000 pregnancies Most common non-GYN cancer Present as a painless mass Worse prognosis Advanced stage Stage II-III 75% rate (median 40mos) Hyperestrogenic state
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Breast Ca during Pregnancy
Diagnosis Ultrasound Mammogram Core needle biopsy
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Breast Ca during Pregnancy
Treatment 1st trimester TM with SLN bx Chemotherapy Significant risk of spontaneous abortion Fetal malformation 2nd & 3rd trimester TM w/ SLN bx or Lumpectomy with SLN bx radiation
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Question Following an excisional biopsy for microcalifications, the pathology report states there is LCIS present. You discuss with the patient She needs a lumpectomy then RT She would benefit from a mirror biopsy She has a future cancer risk of 1% per yr No known therapy to help her
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Question 55 yo female underwent a Rt lumpectomy with SLN bx.
Pathology showed a 3.5 cm well-differentiated infiltrating Ductal ca. The sentinel lymph nodes were negative (0/2). No evidence of any distance mets. What is her stage?
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40 yo woman presents with a 2cm mass in her right breast first detected by mammo. A core biopsy reveals infiltrating ductal ca. She has no palpable lymph nodes. Appropriate therapy for the patient would include: -- partial mastectomy -- sentinel lymph node biopsy -- consideration of adjuvant chemo -- radiation therapy -- all of the above
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