Interactive Transcript
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So case number one a 58 year old female presents for
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Baseline screening exam and when you're reading these cases,
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it's really important to note whether they're a
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screening or they're a diagnostic case.
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It helps you with what birads you're going to give. So in
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this case, it's a baseline screening.
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So here's her CC View.
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And here's hero View and if
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it's not projecting well.
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There are some calcifications in the
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left lower Central breath kind
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of middle to post your third. So like
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I said, she's a screening exam.
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So therefore what is the appropriate by
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Red category?
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So office screening exam the the appropriate criteria
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would be by Reds would be a zero actually
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because
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They are suspicious. There's no doubt about that. But there are
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screening exam. So first you need to call them back and then
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you're going to give them the bireds for or the five
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depending on what how you're feeling.
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So is that that appropriate buyer? I
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would be a zero you need more imaging.
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So even if a cancer is obvious on a screening
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exam you're going to want to give them a zero. Nobody wants to get a letter in
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the mail thing. You have highly suspicious for cancer. So the
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zero allows us to well number
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one, you can be fooled but clearly these are cancer. It's also
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going to allow you to establish a relationship with
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a patient before telling them that they have cancer. So you're
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gonna bring them in get additional views, which we're going to
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go over and then you'll tell them that they need to buy
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it.
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So what views should we be getting so these are
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magnification views whenever you have
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calcifications. You want to get a magnification to use we're going to talk about that more
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but you can see that there is lots
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of calcifications. I'm going to give you a minute to look at this these images
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and I want you to think about what the scriptures
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you would use to describe these calcifications.
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Um, so, you know when you're talking about morphology and
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distribution, so I think
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there's this is a multiple choice question. So I think there should
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be a polling feature here and the answer
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in your head. But really you the thing we're
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going for here is course heterogeneous and segmental. So
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you obviously want to pick a suspicious type of
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calcification this trophic
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or not suspicious popcorn or not suspicious so that already excludes
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to and then so it's between
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fine pleomorphic linear or course heterogeneous segmental.
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I mean, both are
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right because they're ultimately going to lead to buy it see but these are more of course
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heterogeneous. So What by Reds is this going
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to be?
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Leave it up for a minute. Remember now, this is a diag.
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Good. So everyone got that, you know, these are highly suspicious
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calcifications. Now, you can give them the bi-reds five
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that we wanted to give them before so highly
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suspicious. So I just want to
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go over the byrides Lexicon. They
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were updated in 2014. There's a
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few types of changes a few important changes in
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that update. There's clustered is
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no longer a category. It's now grouped instead and
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instead of they used to have benign into
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sorry intermediate and suspicious now,
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they just have the nine and suspicious. So
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a more efficient course heterogeneous got bumped up. So now
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they're suspicious. So whenever I tell the pay my residence
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if you're using the words, of course heterogeneous, the next
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word that of your mouth should be biopsy. So if you think it's
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like a fiber adenoma don't use the words, of course heterogeneous
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use the words popcorn or course, you
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know, so it gets a little confusing there.
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So eggshell and Lutheran centered
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calcifications are now called Rim calcifications and
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round and punctate are now just round.
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And in terms of distribution it goes
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from you know least suspicious to most suspicious
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so diffuse and Regional when they're kind of all throughout the
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breath. That's not that suspicious. It gets more suspicious
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as they become grouped or a linear
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or segmental like in our case. These would be the suspicious.
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The suspicious distribution and
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I just want to remind you that that morphology
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and distribution Trump stability.
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So if there's course heterogeneous calcifications that
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had been stable for a few years. It
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still can be dcis and it still May warrant a
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biopsy I've seen if we've had a few cases like that
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where you know, we're all the first person doesn't recommend
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to buy it see and then they're kind of we're all kind of falsely reassured
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that they're okay and then five years later they're still
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there, but they've never really been addressed and they biopsied
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them in their dcis. So, you know, it's important. We always
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say the bill morphology from
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stability.
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Okay next case. So these are segmental, you
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know course heterogeneous or pleomorphic calcifications, but
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they're not linear in this case.
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So you really would want to do this if you
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had the ability to do a stereotactic biopsy. You
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would want to do that. In this case
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when there's six centimeters of calcifications. Typically, we
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biopsy the front and the back so we'll buy a C2
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areas. And the reason we do that is because if a
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patient wants to be
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Candidate for breast conservation therapy you need
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account you need to document the extent. So in this case six centimeters
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is these that's typically not a good
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candidate for breast conservation therapy. We usually say under
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five centimeters, you know or localized field
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quadrant of the breast that's very surgical dependent and
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patient-dependent. Like if the patient has a large breast you might
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be able to do some segmental lumpectomy, but in
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most cases that's a criteria to do a mastectomy.
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So it's always really important to document the
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extent of calcification. So if you see a large area biopsy two
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that one in the front one in the back if it
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is greater than two centimeters and they are going to
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go to breast conservation therapy. We usually put in two needles
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and wires on the day of their needle localization
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to make sure that all the calcifications are removed.