قراءة
عرض

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

BREAST TUMORS: One of the most important lesions of the female breast. Since breast tissue consists of both epithelial and connective tissue elements, then 2 major groups of tumor can arise from the breast:

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Stromal tumors: Arise from connective tissue, mainly from hormone- responsive intralobular stroma, example: - Fibroadenoma. - Phyllodes tumor. - Soft tissue tumor ( benign & sarcomas). Epithelial tumors: - Tubular adenoma. - Carcinoma.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Fibroadenoma: It is the most common benign tumor of the breast. A mixed tumor that composed of both fibrous and glandular elements. Age: Mostly in young age group ( before 30 years).

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Morphology: Gross: -Well circumscribed encapsulated spherical-oval firm mass. Variable size (1-10cm).

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Morphology: M.I: - Dual proliferation of benign-looking glands in a background of loose fibroblastic stroma.



Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology
Clinically: Painless, firm, very slowly growing.freely mobile mass ( breast mouse). Diagnosis: Clinical, FNA, Mammogram (pop corn calcification).

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Phyllodes tumor:
A low grade malignant tumor, may recur locally but only rarely metastasize. Affects older age group. Gross: Size: M.i: Malignant variant.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Incidence & epidemiology: Most common: 2nd killer: Incidence increases with age (at 90years risk is 1:8). Incidence is rising: Screening programs:
Breast carcinoma:

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Breast carcinoma: Incidence and epidemiology: - It is the most common malignancy of the breast and it is the most common malignant tumor of female breast and only second to lung cancer as a cause of cancer-related death. - The incidence increases with age. A women who lives to the age of 90 has a one in 8 chance of developing the breast CA ( in USA).

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Incidence and epidemiology cont…- The incidence is increasing over the last 30 years, either related to some unindentified environmental causes or mostly due to increase no. of cases detected by screening programs (breast exam and mammogram). Howevere, the mortality rate from CA breast starts to decline slightly over the last 10 years due to increased no. of cases detected at a curable state ( in situ and low stage).

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

RISK FACTORS: Include the following: Geographical influence: More common among women form Europe & North America than those from Africa & Asia. Age: Rare before 25, average age is 64 year.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Genetic factors & family history of breast CA: -. -, Familial cancers: BRCA1 and BRCA2:

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Menstrual & reproductive history: Related to hormonal imbalance, mostly excessive exposure to ER ( and PR), evidence: - . . . . . .

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Breast feeding: Proliferative breast disorders: Carcinoma of the contralateral breast or endometrium:

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Radiation exposure: Especially if the exposure occurs in early age & heavy dose. Obesity: Increases the risk in postmenopause (due to increase ER synthesis in subcutaneous fat) but not in young women. Dietary & life style: -. - -.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Distribution: Lt breast affected more than Rt breast. 50% of cases arise in the upper outer quadrant ( 10% in the remaining quadrants and 20% central subareolar). Ca is bilateral in 4% of cases.
20%
10%
10%
10%
50%

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Classification: Ca is divided into: Non-invasive ( Ca in situ): Definition: Classified into ductal and lobular (DCIS & LCIS) on the basis of the resemblance of the involved space to ducts & lobules. In the past the incidence of in situ Ca was 5%, now it is raised to 15-30% WHY?.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Invasive carcinoma: -Definition: - Classified into several types depending on the architectural pattern:

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Total Cancers
Per Cent
In Situ Carcinoma
15-30
Ductal carcinoma in situ
80
Lobular carcinoma in situ
20
Invasive Carcinoma
70-85
No special type carcinoma ("ductal")
79
Lobular carcinoma
10
Tubular/cribriform carcinoma
6
Mucinous (colloid) carcinoma
2
Medullary carcinoma
2
Papillary carcinoma
1
Metaplastic carcinoma
<1
Distribution of Histologic Types of Breast Cancer


Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology
Morphology: Non-invasive ( Ca in situ):- Types: ductal/lobular,,,, comedo/ non-comedo.- Paget’s disease of the nipple.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Non-invasive ( Ca in situ): - Her the ducts or lobules become filled by malignant cells (showing all features of malignancy), but they are limited by the basement membrane of the ducts or lobules.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Non-invasive ( Ca in situ): - Classified into several types depending on the morphological architecture ( e.g diffuse, cribriform, papillary..).

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Non-invasive ( Ca in situ): Comedo carcinoma:

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Non-invasive ( Ca in situ):Paget’s disease of the nipple:- Rare, seen in 1-2% of cases.- Definition:

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Non-invasive ( Ca in situ):Paget’s disease of the nipple:- Clinically:


Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology
Note: About 25-30% of in situ carcinoma (DCIS & LCIS) well eventually develop into invasive carcinoma.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Invasive Carcinoma: Her malignant cells had extended & invaded beyond the basement membrane of the ducts or lobules into the adjacent stroma, where they incite desmoplastic reaction.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Gross: Firm-hard whitish greyish mass with irregular invasive outlines. - Scirrhous carcinoma?

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

M.I: Depending on the microscopical appearance, invasive carcinoma can be classified into several types:
Invasive Carcinoma
70-85%
No special type carcinoma ("ductal")
79
Lobular carcinoma
10
Tubular/cribriform carcinoma
6
Mucinous (colloid) carcinoma
2
Medullary carcinoma
2
Papillary carcinoma
1
Metaplastic carcinoma
<1
They have better prognosis than ductal & lobular

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

M.I: Invasive ductal carcinoma (NOS): - This the most common type. - Malignant cells arrange in the form of glands, islands, and cords with surrounding dense fibroblastic reaction.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

M.I: Invasive lobular carcinoma: Less common type. Malignant cells arrange in the form of lines of single cells called Indian fill appearance. It characterized by high incidence of bilaterality & multicentricity.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Grading of invasive carcinoma: 3 grades depending on cytological & architectural features. Grade I Grade II Grade III

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Spread of invasive carcinoma:Either by: Local spread into overlying skin & underlying muscle & chest wall. Lymphatic: - Axillary LN (commonest 50%).- Supraclavicular LN.- Internal mammary LN Hematogenous: To bones, lung&pleura, liver, ovary, adrenal, CNS,….etc.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Staging of invasive carcinoma: Staging is important for determination of treatment and prognosis. Of the commonly used staging system is that devised by the AJC on breast cancer. (There is also TNM staging)

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Stage
Mass
Lymph node
Metastasis
0
DCIS &LCIS
Nil
Nil
I
<2cm
Nil
Nil
II
<5cm
<3 axillary
Nil
or
>5cm
Nil
Nil
III
>5cm
Positive
Nil
or
<5cm
>4 axill LN
Nil
or
Any size
Fixed axill. LN
or
Ca invading chest wall, or skin, or inflam Ca
-/+
Nil
or
Any size
int.mammary LN
Nil
IV
Any
Any
Positive

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

The TNM classification of breast cancer: Tumor size: T0 - no primary tumor found Tis - in situ (tumor has not invaded other tissue) T1 - < 2 cm T1mic ≤ 0.1 cm (microinvasive) T1a > 0.1 to 0.5 cm T1b > 0.5 to 1 cm T1c > 1 to 2 cm T2 > 2 to 5 cm T3 > 5 cm T4 Chest wall /skin T4a - Chest wall T4b - Skin edema (peau d'orange), ulceration, or satellite skin modules T4c - Both 4a and 4b T4d - Inflammatory carcinoma

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Lymph nodes: N0 - No lymph nodes N1 - Movable axillary N2a - Fixed axillary N2b - Internal mammary clinically apparent N3a - Infraclavicular N3b - Internal mammary clinically apparent with axillary lymph node involvement N3c - Supraclavicular lymph nodes Distant metastasis: M0 - No M1 - Yes

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Stage grouping: Stage 0: Tis Stage I: T1,N0,M0 Stage IIA: T0-1,N1,M0 or T2,N0,M0 Stage IIB: T2,N1,M0 or T3,N0,M0 Stage IIIA: T3,N1,M0 or T0-3,N2,M0 Stage IIIB: T4,any N,M0 Stage IIIC: any T,N3,M0 Stage IV: any T,any N,M1

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Clinical presentation: Palpable mass: Painless, irregular, hard, mobile or fixed. Skin or nipple retraction: Peau’d orange: Inflammatory carcinoma: Evidence of metastasis: hemoptysis, pathological #,…..

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Investigation:Manual examination:Mammogram & US:FNA:Frozen section:Excisional biopsy:Immunohistochemistry:Genetic tests:Detection of mets: CXR,CT, bone scan,….

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Treatment
Surgery Chemotherapy Radiotherapy Hormonal therapy



Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology
Prophylactic therapy

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Prognosis: Lymph node mets: Size of the primary tumor: Distant mets: Locally advanced disease: Tumor grade: Inflammatory CA: Histologic subtypes: ER & PR receptor status: Overexpression of HER2 (c-erb-B2): Other

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Survival:
Stage I : 5 year survival 87% Stage II : 5 year survival 75% Stage III : 5 year survival 46% Stage IV: 5 year survival 13%

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Male breast: Male breast is rudimentary & is relatively free of pathologic involvement. Only 2 disorders occur with sufficient frequency to be considered: Gynecomastia. Carcinoma.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Gynecomastia:Enlargement of male breast, usually results from hormonal imbalance ( excess ER)Either physiologic: at puberty and in elderly people ( decrease testosterone & inc. ER –fat-).Pathological in:-.-.-.-

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Morphology: Either unilateral or bilateral, as discoid subareolar mass. Microscopically ductal proliferation with fibrosis.

Dr. Nazar Jawhar- Department of Pathology

Carcinoma of the male breast: Incidence is 1:125 Same as female (pathology, clinically, treatment) More aggressive & early invasion





رفعت المحاضرة من قبل: عبدالرزاق نائل الحافظ
المشاهدات: لقد قام 0 عضواً و 70 زائراً بقراءة هذه المحاضرة








تسجيل دخول

أو
عبر الحساب الاعتيادي
الرجاء كتابة البريد الالكتروني بشكل صحيح
الرجاء كتابة كلمة المرور
لست عضواً في موقع محاضراتي؟
اضغط هنا للتسجيل