Breast Tumors
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It is one of the most common tumors ever. They form two basic groups:
- Benigntumor;
- 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]
- The most serious risk is age (from the age of 30 the incidence rises, over 45 years represent 85% of tumors);
- sporadic carcinomas – dysplastic changes of epithelial cells occur ( carcinoma in situ ) up to the development of cancer;
- The activity of stromal cells is also applied, which produce proteolytic enzymes and angiogenic factors - they facilitate growth and metastasis ;
- Hormonal influences – long-term effect of estrogens ;
- Genetically determined cancers – occurrence in direct relatives (mother, sister, daughter) or cumulation of tumors within syndromes ( Li-Fraumeni syndrome – mutation of one p53 allele , Cowden syndrome – rare, associated with hamartomas);
- BRCA 1 and 2 genes are of greatest importance for the detection of genetic conditions ;
- a woman with a BRCA 1 mutation has a lifetime risk of cancer of 55-85% (for ovarian cancer 15-45%);
- common in Jewish population;
- male BRCA carriers are in turn at risk of prostate and colorectal cancer ;
- hereditary carcinoma is often bilateral;
- BRCA 2 positive cancer is usually very poorly differentiated, aggressive.
Risk factors:[edit | edit source]
- Length of exposure to estrogens – early menarche , late menopause , nulliparity;
- Other breast diseases – cystic adenomas , ductal papillomas (risk of overlooking cancer);
- Effects of ionizing radiation – including mammography ;
- Obesity , increased fat intake and lack of exercise;
- The influence of smoking, chemical substances, hormonal contraception has not been clearly documented.
Clinical manifestations[edit | edit source]
- 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,...
- Paraneoplasia – dermatomyositis , 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]
Links[edit | edit source]
[edit | edit source]
- Breast
- Hereditary tumor syndromes
- Benign breast disease
- Classification of breast tumors according to Tabár
- classification of breast tumors
- Diagnostic imaging methods in senology
- Infiltrating mammary carcinoma (preparation)
External links[edit | edit source]
BENEŠ, Jiří. Study materials [online]. [cit. 2018-01-06]. <http://jirben2.chytrak.cz/>.