Interactive Transcript
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This is a patient who had invasive ductal
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carcinoma diagnosed in the left breast.
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We'll start with the left breast,
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and we'll move on to the right.
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So this is the post-GAD non-subtracted
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images, and it has this large area of nod,
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I would call this non-mass enhancement.
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Some people might call it a mass,
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but I think this is all regional
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clumped non-mass enhancement.
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It goes from almost all the way to the
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chest wall, and it goes up into the nipple.
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So this is somebody who's not
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going to be a surgical, uh, a
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lumpectomy candidate on this side.
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Um, there's a couple of nodes that look
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a little suspicious on that side as well.
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They're a little lumpy-bumpy.
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Um, we can talk about nodes
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if you, um, want afterwards.
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You know, that nipple involvement is
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important to identify for the surgeon.
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So that's the ipsilateral breast, which
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I knew about, although I don't think
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they knew it was quite so extensive.
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And then in the right breast, which
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was mammographically normal, there
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were four different abnormalities.
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There were two masses.
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Here's one.
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And then here's that other little
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mass that's pretty adjacent to, and
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one of those was biopsied and shown
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to be invasive ductal carcinoma.
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And then there are two areas of non-mass
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enhancement, this linear area medially here,
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and
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this area inferiorly here,
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which is more segmental.
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Non-mass enhancement, pretty
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homogeneous in that case.
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Um, and this was biopsied and
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it came back as being DCIS.
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So, you know, this was the learning
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point from this case is that we
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do see contralateral malignancies.
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In, um, it depends on the study, three to 5%.
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Um, we did a study that was
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5%, others around three.
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So somewhere in that area, you're going
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to find a contralateral malignancy.
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And of course, that is one of the huge that is
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not otherwise, um, seen on conventional imaging.
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Um, and that is, of course, one of the huge
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advantages of using breast MRI for staging.
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Um, it remains a controversial area.
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Using breast MRI for staging.
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Um, there are proponents and there are
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people who don't feel that it's helpful.
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Um, we, at my institution, every patient
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who has breast cancer, who is, um, under the
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age of 80, um, has a breast MRI, virtually
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a hundred percent, if they can have it.
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You do need to work these up.
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You should never buy RADS 3, a contralateral
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abnormality in a patient who has an ipsilateral
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malignancy, who is likely to be undergoing
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any form of chemo or hormonal therapy.
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The reason being is, you know, if you, um, you
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know, say this patient has a mastectomy and has
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chemotherapy afterwards, or has tamoxifen or
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something, um, and then these areas disappear,
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well, you don't know if they were real or not.
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So you don't know if they were cancer or not.
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So always, um, you should never buy RADS
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3, a contralateral breast in a patient with
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ipsilateral breast cancer for staging.
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