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Case - Invasive Ductal Tubular Carcinoma

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This last case is another woman

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who's very dense, as you can see.

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She's 68, and again, you know, we start with

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just her localizer, and then we have the T2

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here, and she's got a lot going on, you know,

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very active breasts and extremely dense.

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If we look down here at her pre-contrast T1,

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you can actually see that she's got some debris.

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Within her ducts, fluid bilaterally also almost

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looks like she's got a mass in her anterior

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left breast, but on her post-contrast, you

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can see, you know, that's not enhancing again.

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This is post-contrast.

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We can see still the brightest material.

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No change in its enhancement pattern

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within the duct structures bilaterally, but

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what I'd like to call your attention to

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is in the superior breast right here is a very

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small focal area of enhancement that appears

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to bridge her glandular tissue different than

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all the other sites, you know, the ductal

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areas that didn't enhance and all of that.

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And you can see right here in the

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superior slightly lateral breast.

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And now I'm going to show

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you her subtraction image.

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And again, it's the only dominant area enhancing.

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It's a little irregular.

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All that other activity or breasts

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is not enhancing. That non enhancing mass actually was stable

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32 00:01:37,279 --> 00:01:39,110 on her mammogram from years ago.

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I'll show you her mammogram.

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It's quite complex, but so we've got this

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little focal area, and that was really,

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really teeny and a complicated breast.

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I'll show you now her mammogram.

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Here's her mammogram again.

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Very, very active.

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This was on the anterior

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aspects slightly medial to her nipple.

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This is marking a skin lesion

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that really had no significance.

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Nothing pops out on her 2D mammogram.

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I'll show you now her tomosynthesis study.

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And again, very complicated nodular breasts.

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We're looking for something out

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in the posterior lateral breast.

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On the left side, here's the tomosynthesis

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of her left breast, and I think you can

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actually see a very subtle area of distortion.

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I hope you can see my area and

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my arrow pointing to this site.

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Laterally, that really does correspond to that MR

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56 00:02:37,625 --> 00:02:39,875 finding pretty remarkable.

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It was not as well seen on the MLO

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59 00:02:43,005 --> 00:02:43,205

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tomo image here, and we're moving

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into the lateral breast here.

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And there's a lot of complex tissue, but on that

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CC view, I think you can see it.

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It's in this area somewhere,

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but very, very hard to discern.

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Targeted ultrasound, of course,

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was done looking for the area.

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See, maybe on the CC Tomo images only and on the

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MRI, and nothing was really seen to correlate.

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There was a lot of shadowing and

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irregular structures, but no focal area.

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So she underwent an M.

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R.

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guided core biopsy.

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And this was an invasive ductal

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carcinoma of a tubular type.

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So that often causes distortion.

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It was about six millimeters in size, and

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it also was associated with in the background,

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parenchyma ALH, atypical lobular hyperplasia,

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again, just a, you know, a risk lesion.

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She did go on to have a sentinel node

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biopsy, which of course was negative.

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She had three nodes removed.

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So it was very small.

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Tubular carcinomas tend to be fairly low

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grade, but again detected by the MRI.

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One could have possibly tried a single view

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using that CC subtle distortion, a tomo

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guided core biopsy, but I think it's much

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better seen on MR, and that was our preference.

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Could not find the correlate by ultrasound.

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So those are my cases.

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I hope those showed you a little

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bit about what we're using.

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I think one of the interesting

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things, as I said in my lecture about

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the abbreviated MR is we're beginning to

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see, as others have, that there may be some

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improvement in specificity when you're only

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looking for avidly rapidly enhancing lesions.

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I think we need really, really big data

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to compare that to full protocol in

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MRI, but we're very excited about it.

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And it's

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something that we really offer at our site.

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Now, people talk about contrast mammo.

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That's also a good alternative.

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We just happen to have access to our MR

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units very close to our breast imaging

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area and our diagnostic imaging area.

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So, it's an easy thing for

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the patients to move between.

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Of course, contrast mammo is very, very good, gives

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you, again, the physiologic imaging with contrast.

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It doesn't image as far back, obviously, into the

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chest wall, axilla, and things like that, but it's

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certainly an alternative for contrast imaging and

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increasing your sensitivity of cancer detection.

Report

Description

Faculty

Emily F. Conant, MD

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

Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania

Tags

Women's Health

Screening

Neoplastic

MRI

Diagnosis & Staging

Breast

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