Interactive Transcript
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Our next case is a 70 year old woman
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who had a remote history of left breast cancer
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and recent diagnosis of left invasive lobular carcinoma.
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And we did an MRI to evaluate extent of disease.
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I can recall that she was being seen for routine follow-up
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and she had a left lumpectomy with a lot of distortion
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at the lumpectomy site.
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And it just seemed like the distortion was more
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significant on the left than it had been before.
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And the right side, we thought was normal.
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She had a lot of dense tissue in the lateral breast
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but nothing new.
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And this was a 2D mammogram by her choice.
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So we recalled her for the apparent,
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increase in distortion in the left breast.
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And then she had a further evaluation with ultrasound that
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showed some very vague mass like areas on ultrasound.
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It was just a little bit difficult to know exactly where
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the cancers were, how many there were.
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It seemed like there was more than one.
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I think she had two biopsies showing invasive lobular carcinoma,
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so that we thought the MRI would be very helpful.
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Just going to show you her MIP,
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and this is her left breast, which is smaller than the
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right because she's had a prior fairly large lumpectomy,
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and this shows multiple masses in the lateral left breast.
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So,
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you know, that's the area that we were interested in.
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We thought her right breast was normal,
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mammographically,
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but
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surprisingly, there's a large enhancing mass.
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They are in the lateral right breast.
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So we're going to investigate this a little further.
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I'm going to show our T1-weighted images
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and our post contrast images.
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And just looking at that area where we
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were interested in the left breast,
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there's a lot of non mass enhancement with
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kind of smaller irregular masses and this,
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most of this had already been biopsied.
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It was a little bit more extensive than
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we thought, and of a larger area.
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And she had already been treated previously with
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lumpectomy and radiation to this breast.
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But several masses, they are on the left.
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And then, the surprise finding was this quite large mass.
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Almost 3 cm mass in the right breast
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that was hiding in this area of extreme fibroglandular tissue,
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like her overall pattern is heterogeneous, but she's,
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she's pretty glandular right in this area.
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And on her 2D mammogram,
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that was completely dense. And of course,
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2D we had no thin slices to go through, but we,
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totally couldn't see this large mass that was sitting right there.
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So,
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we were
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very worried about that mass on the right side.
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So, we did a second look ultrasound.
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That's what had been recommended.
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And a second look ultrasound was performed,
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showed a mass and it was biopsied,
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and it was an invasive carcinoma.
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So,
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this patient elected to have bilateral
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mastectomy in light of these findings.
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And I have to credit MRI here because the mammography
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did not find this mass on the right side, and it actually
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is quite significant,
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biologically significant mass.
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And, you know, we also looked at T1-weighted source images,
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pre and post contrast,
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and it just shows you that that mass is sitting here in a sea of
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fibroglandular tissue, so easy to, easy to hide.
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