Interactive Transcript
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Thank you so much. And thank you to everyone for logging in
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today. Thank you for that introduction. Today.
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I'm going to be talking I'm gonna be showing some
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breast Imaging cases with the emphasis
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on appropriate workup and management. I hope
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you find it helpful. So the goals of the lecture
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are to review the appropriate workup of screening and diagnostic findings
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to emphasize important management issues
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and discuss special circumstances and breast Imaging
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and Justice as a disclaimer. I hope I
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don't get interrupted but yourself a clinic right now, so I
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might get interrupted, but I hope not.
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So before we get started, I'm going to give you
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guys some pre-test questions to test your knowledge before
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we even get started.
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A patient presents with a palpable area of concern diagnostic
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mammogram is negative. What is
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the next appropriate step?
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And I just want you to answer this in your head. You don't
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actually need to put up the polling feature because I
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didn't give the answer yet. But we're going to come to this later in
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the talk. So think about this what you want to
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do for this palpable with a negative mammogram reassure ultrasound
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MRI or surgical consultation.
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And patient had a biopsy which
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revealed a typical ductal hyperplasia. What is your recommendation? You
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followed up in six months with a birads three
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say it's benign follow up in one year surgical excision
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with a needle look or surgical excision with stereotactic biopsy.
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So you can take a minute and answer that in your head.
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We will learn the answer if you don't know it already.
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And what is a difference between multifocal and
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multi-centric breast cancer? So multifocal involves
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more than one quadrant multi-centric involves
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one quadrant be multicentric involved
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more than one quadrant multifocal involved one quadrant, you
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know gets a little confusing with this multifocal multi-centric.
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So we're going to talk about you know, which one is which going
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forward?
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All right. So 70 year old female presenting with a palpable
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area of concern in her right upper outer breast.
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This is her Baseline study.
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And when you're reading a case in mammo, it's really important to
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just it to determine whether
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it's a screening or diagnostic study. So, you know
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for starters a screening study is an eighth symptomatic patient. So
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by definition this should be a diagnostic study
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if it's not yet to call them back but palpable should
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be a diagnostic study. So already we kind
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of are thinking it's a Diagnostics study. So keep that in mind when you're
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giving your buy rides because it does make a difference.
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So these are
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this is her CC view. She has a
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palpable in her right upper outer breast and certainly
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you can see in a regular stipulated mass and
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her right upper outer quadrant, but take
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a minute and just see if you see
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anything else particularly in the other breast.
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Satisfaction of search is a big problem or diagnostic
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dilemma in breast Imaging. So
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even once once people find the cancer, they're natural
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tendency is to stop and and stop
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looking. But if you look you'll notice
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that there is actually a foot. There's two focal asymmetries in
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the left breast. So let me
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What is that not coming up? So she's got one here,
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which is in the left.
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Upper inner breath and then also one in the
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left upper outer breast.
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Which you know you could get I would
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recommend getting spot compression for those to see
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if it persists.
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And then we would proceed to ultrasound for
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both sides. So, you know when you're looking at the left left
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upper inner so I always want you to think about what quadrant
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we're in in terms of clock position because that becomes
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important when you're looking at an ultrasound and make sure you find a correlate.
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And so in the right breast, this is
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her palpable area of concern. You can see a large.
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Irregular hypoechoic math corresponding to
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the area of palpable concern. I don't have calibers on here,
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but it certainly over two centimeters and then always,
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you know, we it really is
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institutional dependent. But at our institution if you see something that's
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highly suspicious for malignancy. We always look in the axilla to
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see if there's any abnormal nodes. And in
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the last remember we said that there was something in the left upper outer
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quadrant, so
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I'm sorry, there was something in the left upper inner quadrants. This is left upper
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inner so there's a regular mass of 10 and then
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there was a second one at two eight. So these
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are different quadrants of the left breast. So
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I want you
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to think is that multi-centric or multifocal on the left?
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And what by Reds would you give so you want
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to give that a buy red five? So we're
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gonna take a minute to talk about multi-centric multifocal cancers.
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So multicentric is more than one quadrant. So
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on the left when it's ten o'clock, so it's left upper inner
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and then two o'clock which is left upper out or that would be multi-centric.
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Multifocal is when you have two areas
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of disease in one quadrant or a fairly close
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together.
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And synchronous so she also had this so she
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had synchronous cancer. So two term two tumors diagnosed
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within six months of each other or metacranous
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means two tumors diagnose
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greater than six months apart. So it's
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not uncommon to find something in the other breasts where you
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know in the other quadrant, that's why we get staging memorized to see,
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you know, if you didn't really find that on the screening mammogram or
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the diagnostic mammogram, you would certainly find it are
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the staging work up with an MRI.