What's the most frequently diagnosed form of cancer worldwide & the leading cause of cancer mortality in women?
Peak incidence - Pre-menopause or post-menopause?
Breast cancer;
BRCA are tumor suppressor genes that code for a DNA repair protein.
What is their inheritance pattern?
Autosomal-dominant
Arrows show:
Arrows:
hematoxylin-eosin stain; original magnification, ×4) shows tumor cells within lymphatic vessels in the dermis
Why are Estrogen & progesterone receptors important here?
Testing for inherited BRCA1 and BRCA2 variants may be done using a __ sample
a blood sample or a saliva sample
Extra 100: Both men and women who inherit a harmful BRCA1 or BRCA2 variant, whether or not they develop cancer themselves, may pass the variant to their children. Each child has a __% chance of inheriting a parent’s variant. Why?
Prognosis?
(5-year survival rate?)
5-year survival rate is ∼ 40%
Name at least two most common metastasis regions of breast cancer
What's typically done to evaluate a palpable breast mass?
History(including breast cancer risk assessment),
Physical Exam,
Imaging,
then Biopsy
Difference between SNL biopsy & ALN dissection?
(maybe # of lymph nodes removed?)
1-5 in SNL
vs
10-40 in ALN during mastectomy, simultaneously
__ are tumor suppressor genes that code for a DNA repair protein
Associated with an increased risk for breast cancer and ovarian cancer
Men with breast cancer are often positive for ___2
Name 3 risk factors
Case: The patient is a 39 y/o & has not yet undergone a screening mammogram despite multiple family hx of cancer.
What's the recommended age for starting annual mammogram screening?
40 to 49: The decision to start screening should be an individual one(in this case, most likely recommended)
50 to 74: Biennially
Standard adjuvant treatment of HER2 receptor–positive disease is trastuzumab with or without pertuzumab for 1 year after surgery.
What is the MOA of Trastuzumab?
As an antibody, one of the major mechanisms of trastuzumab is to attract immune cells to tumor sites that overexpress HER2, by a mechanism called antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC).
Who does Multidisciplinary team consist of?
Name at least two besides breast surgeon and oncologist.
Recommendations for specialist referral
Name this symptom in french & the most common cause of it is _____
ALSO, Name at least another clinical feature of this cancer.
extra 100: patients with this type of cancer ^ or locally advanced tumors with skin and/or chest wall involvement should undergo: (Axillary Node dissection Or Sentinel Node Biopsy?)
Peau d' orange; Inflammatory breast cancer
Former
How to differentiate Benign vs Malignant Lesion - Mammography findings?
(think: appearance of the lesion, margins, calcifications, further management?)
Treatment - drug for Pre-menopausal women?
MOA?
Tamoxifen:
Competitive antagonist on the estrogen receptors of the breast → ↓ breast cancer cell growth
(Tamoxifen for 5 years with or without ovarian suppression or ablation, followed by either an additional 5 years of tamoxifen or an aromatase inhibitor to complete 10 years of endocrine treatment
Aromatase inhibitor therapy for 5 years plus ovarian suppression or ablation)
Breast cancers with harmful BRCA1 variants are more likely to be "triple-negative cancers."
What does Triple-Negative cancer mean?
The breast cancer cells do not have estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, or large amounts of HER2/neu protein) than sporadic breast cancers or breast cancers with harmful BRCA2 variants.
Triple-negative cancers are harder to treat and have a poorer prognosis than other types of breast cancers.
Inflammatory breast cancer (stage T4dN2M0, ER negative, PR negative, HER2 negative fluorescence in situ hybridization )
View?
Arrows?
Red Oval?
View: Mediolateral oblique mammogram
Arrows: skin thickening (involving more than one-third of the breast)
Red Oval: two irregular masses, and enlarged left axillary lymph nodes
US-guided core biopsy of the dominant mass (*) at the 11-o’clock position posterior depth showed invasive lobular carcinoma
Treatment method for patients with inflammatory breast cancer or locally advanced tumors with skin and/or chest wall involvement?
Patients with inflammatory breast cancer or locally advanced tumors with skin and/or chest wall involvement should undergo axillary node dissection(simultaneously w/ mastectomy) rather than sentinel node biopsy.
After total mastectomy, both Chest wall & Regional nodal irradiation.
Then, Systemic Therapy: chemotherapy, endocrine therapy, and HER2-targeting biologic therapies; other targeting agents; and immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Proper methods of Self Breast Cancer Examination?
- Pretend you are teaching/advising a patient/family member
A) Inspection: Look at breasts directly in a mirror, with the arms at the sides, then raised above the head. Inspect the shape of each breast and look for changes in skin texture (e.g., dimpling, puckering, orange-peel texture).
B) Palpation of breast tissue in each of the four patterns depicted to cover all breast tissue
C) Palpation of the nipple: Squeeze the nipple gently and inspect for discharge (milky or bloody).
D) Palpation of axillary breast tissue: While lying down, palpate the axillary tail of the breast, which extends into the axilla.