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Case - Extensive DCIS

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So, this example is, I think, really remarkable.

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This is a 51-year-old woman who also

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had dense breasts mammographically.

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A negative screener was a routine

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screener and opted for supplemental

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screening with abbreviated MR.

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And what you can see is, again,

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first a T1 up in the upper corner

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here, really just to localize her.

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Here's her T2.

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And what you can see on her T2 is she's

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got some prominent ducts bilaterally.

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They're fluid-filled.

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I think you can see those anteriorly here.

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I'll blow it up for you,

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you know, kind of symmetric.

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You see some nodes; nothing really stands out.

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Here's her pre-contrast down here.

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I'm going to go directly to the post-contrast.

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Non-sub and what you can see is a lot of regional

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enhancement.

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In the medial right breast, very

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nodular, but a whole chunk of it.

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Very, very impressive.

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And now I want to show you her subtraction image.

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And again, there's a little

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bit of motion artifact.

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You can see this extensive area, and

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we're measuring it as about—it’s almost 12

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centimeters right to the back of her nipple

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along the medial aspect of that right breast.

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So, incredibly extensive, asymmetric

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enhancement; maybe there's even

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some more centrally you can see.

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So this is highly suspicious, and it makes you

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say, well, what did her mammogram look like?

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Let me show you that now.

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So here's her mammogram, and down

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below you can see her prior mammogram

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and you can see how dense she is.

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So you might say, you know, are there

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calcifications in that linear area?

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And here's the medial aspect of the right breast.

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And you really don't see anything going on.

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I'll show you now her MLO; you really don't see

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anything remarkable that would correlate.

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You know, there's maybe one calcification

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there, but nothing that correlates

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with what we're seeing on that MR.

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Here's her tomo.

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Which, again, you know, we saw some big

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ducts and things, and I think you can see

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those in our sub-area and maybe as we tomo

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through in retrospect, you might say, you

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know, there are some ducts and things like that,

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but nothing that jumps out as remarkable.

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And so,

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really this cancer, this was extensive DCIS.

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It was an intermediate-grade cribriform,

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papillary, and micropapillary.

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Because of the extent, she

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went on to a node dissection.

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You can see her nodes look

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beautiful on that MLO mammogram.

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And of course, they were negative.

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But this is all about the dynamic

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imaging that we can do with contrast.

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And so, this was quite a remarkable case.

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Unfortunately, she went on to mastectomy

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because of the extent of the disease.

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Again, she was extremely dense,

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supplemental screening with abbreviated MR.

Report

Faculty

Emily F. Conant, MD

Professor of Radiology, Chief of Breast Imaging, Vice Chair of Faculty Development

Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania

Tags

Screening

Neoplastic

MRI

Diagnosis & Staging

Breast

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