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BI-RADS 5 – Right Inflammatory Cancer, Bilateral Nodes

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0:01

And this is another case of 49 year old woman with a

0:05

recent diagnosis of right inflammatory breast cancer.

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So she had a red inflamed

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right breast with orange peel skin, or peau d'orange.

0:19

And this is usually related to

0:22

breast cancer metastasis within the dermal lymphatics.

0:27

Sometimes we see

0:30

just a very edematous breast over a breast cancer,

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but in this case, it was inflammatory breast cancer

0:36

and we were asked to assess extent of disease.

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So just showing you her maximum intensity projection image.

0:44

You can see that the entire right breast is abnormal,

0:49

the skin is enhancing, most of the breast enhances.

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There are abnormal lymph nodes.

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The left breast looks relatively quiet.

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And we'll take a look at this a little further.

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So here are our T1-weighted

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non-fat saturated images and our T1-weighted first post

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contrast subtraction images.

1:13

And you can see that the patient is prone and you can

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see that the breast don't move in the same way.

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So this breast is moving normally,

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but this breast is just kind of

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solid,

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it doesn't have the same kind of contour as the left breast.

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Her skin is diffusely thick.

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And you can see that on this T1-weighted image.

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And on the post contrast image,

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you can see that the skin enhances diffusely.

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There's also diffuse enhancement of the,

1:45

of the breast.

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And you can see that there is a mass here in the upper outer

1:54

right breast, and that has already been biopsied with

1:58

diagnosis of breast cancer.

2:00

But there's fairly extensive non mass enhancement,

2:04

mostly in the lateral breast, but really throughout the breast.

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And then the skin is very,

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very thick and enhances diffusely.

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So this is an inflammatory breast cancer and a BI-RADS 5.

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I mean, it was known that this was a breast cancer but the extent

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of disease was not known at the time of the MRI.

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The other thing that we noticed that we were very

2:29

worried about is that she has bilateral axillary adenopathy.

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So just looking at that again.

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So all of these lymph nodes in the underarm are abnormal,

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both on the right and the left, and there,

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as we scroll through, there are a lot of abnormal lymph nodes.

2:53

And we thought that these were probably involved

2:58

and we recommended a biopsy of an

3:01

axillary lymph node on each side.

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And what we got us our answer,

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So that was done with ultrasound guidance and we

3:08

thought metastatic disease with the breast primary

3:12

and we got that result from both

3:14

the right and the left side.

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So BI-RADS 5 inflammatory breast cancer on the

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right bilateral axillary adenopathy.

Report

Description

Faculty

Lisa Ann Mullen, MD

Assistant Professor; Breast Imaging Fellowship Director

Johns Hopkins Medicine

Tags

Women's Health

Neoplastic

MRI

Breast

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