Breast cancer: Pathology review

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Breast cancer: Pathology review

End of Rotation™ exam review

Cardiovascular

Anatomy clinical correlates: Heart
Anatomy clinical correlates: Mediastinum
Aortic dissections and aneurysms: Pathology review
Coronary artery disease: Pathology review
Peripheral artery disease: Pathology review
Cardiovascular disease screening: Clinical sciences
Carotid artery stenosis screening: Clinical sciences
Abdominal aortic aneurysm: Clinical sciences
Acute coronary syndrome: Clinical sciences
Acute limb ischemia: Clinical sciences
Acute mesenteric ischemia: Clinical sciences
Aortic dissection: Clinical sciences
Approach to chest pain: Clinical sciences
Approach to dyspnea: Clinical sciences
Approach to syncope: Clinical sciences
Ischemic colitis: Clinical sciences
Chronic mesenteric ischemia: Clinical sciences
Coronary artery disease: Clinical sciences
Peripheral arterial disease and ulcers: Clinical sciences
Venous insufficiency and ulcers: Clinical sciences
ACE inhibitors, ARBs and direct renin inhibitors
Adrenergic antagonists: Alpha blockers
Adrenergic antagonists: Beta blockers
Adrenergic antagonists: Presynaptic
Calcium channel blockers
Cholinomimetics: Direct agonists
Cholinomimetics: Indirect agonists (anticholinesterases)
Class I antiarrhythmics: Sodium channel blockers
Class II antiarrhythmics: Beta blockers
Class III antiarrhythmics: Potassium channel blockers
Class IV antiarrhythmics: Calcium channel blockers and others
Lipid-lowering medications: Fibrates
Lipid-lowering medications: Statins
Miscellaneous lipid-lowering medications
Muscarinic antagonists
Positive inotropic medications
Sympatholytics: Alpha-2 agonists
Sympathomimetics: Direct agonists
Thiazide and thiazide-like diuretics

Gastrointestinal and nutritional

Anatomy clinical correlates: Anterior and posterior abdominal wall
Anatomy clinical correlates: Inguinal region
Anatomy clinical correlates: Peritoneum and diaphragm
Anatomy clinical correlates: Viscera of the gastrointestinal tract
Anatomy clinical correlates: Other abdominal organs
Appendicitis: Pathology review
Colorectal polyps and cancer: Pathology review
Diverticular disease: Pathology review
Eating disorders: Pathology review
Esophageal disorders: Pathology review
Gallbladder disorders: Pathology review
Gastrointestinal bleeding: Pathology review
GERD, peptic ulcers, gastritis, and stomach cancer: Pathology review
Inflammatory bowel disease: Pathology review
Jaundice: Pathology review
Pancreatitis: Pathology review
Colorectal cancer screening: Clinical sciences
Acute pancreatitis: Clinical sciences
Approach to acute abdominal pain (pediatrics): Clinical sciences
Approach to the acute abdomen (pediatrics): Clinical sciences
Approach to biliary colic: Clinical sciences
Approach to upper abdominal pain: Clinical sciences
Anal cancer: Clinical sciences
Anal fissure: Clinical sciences
Approach to chronic abdominal pain (pediatrics): Clinical sciences
Approach to vomiting (acute): Clinical sciences
Appendicitis: Clinical sciences
Approach to constipation (pediatrics): Clinical sciences
Approach to vomiting (chronic): Clinical sciences
Approach to constipation: Clinical sciences
Approach to abdominal wall and groin masses: Clinical sciences
Approach to vomiting (newborn and infant): Clinical sciences
Approach to vomiting (pediatrics): Clinical sciences
Approach to diarrhea (chronic): Clinical sciences
Cholecystitis: Clinical sciences
Approach to diarrhea (pediatrics): Clinical sciences
Choledocholithiasis and cholangitis: Clinical sciences
Approach to hematochezia (pediatrics): Clinical sciences
Chronic pancreatitis: Clinical sciences
Approach to hematochezia: Clinical sciences
Colonic volvulus: Clinical sciences
Approach to hepatic masses: Clinical sciences
Colorectal cancer: Clinical sciences
Approach to jaundice (conjugated hyperbilirubinemia): Clinical sciences
Diverticulitis: Clinical sciences
Approach to jaundice (newborn and infant): Clinical sciences
Approach to jaundice (unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia): Clinical sciences
Esophageal cancer: Clinical sciences
Esophageal perforation: Clinical sciences
Approach to melena and hematemesis (pediatrics): Clinical sciences
Approach to melena and hematemesis: Clinical sciences
Fecal impaction: Clinical sciences
Femoral hernias: Clinical sciences
Approach to pancreatic masses: Clinical sciences
Gastric cancer: Clinical sciences
Approach to perianal problems: Clinical sciences
Approach to periumbilical and lower abdominal pain: Clinical sciences
Gastroesophageal reflux disease: Clinical sciences
Approach to pneumoperitoneum and peritonitis (perforated viscus): Clinical sciences
Gastroesophageal varices: Clinical sciences
Approach to postoperative abdominal pain: Clinical sciences
Hemorrhoids: Clinical sciences
Hepatocellular carcinoma: Clinical sciences
Ileus: Clinical sciences
Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn disease): Clinical sciences
Inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis): Clinical sciences
Inguinal hernias: Clinical sciences
Intra-abdominal abscess: Clinical sciences
Ischemic colitis: Clinical sciences
Large bowel obstruction: Clinical sciences
Medication-induced constipation: Clinical sciences
Pancreatic cancer: Clinical sciences
Paraesophageal and hiatal hernia: Clinical sciences
Peptic ulcer disease: Clinical sciences
Perianal abscess and fistula: Clinical sciences
Pilonidal disease: Clinical sciences
Pyloric stenosis: Clinical sciences
Small bowel obstruction: Clinical sciences
Umbilical hernias: Clinical sciences
Ventral and incisional hernias: Clinical sciences
Acid reducing medications
Antidiarrheals
Laxatives and cathartics

Neurology

Anatomy clinical correlates: Cerebral hemispheres
Anatomy clinical correlates: Cerebellum and brainstem
Anatomy clinical correlates: Anterior blood supply to the brain
Anatomy clinical correlates: Posterior blood supply to the brain
Anatomy clinical correlates: Olfactory (CN I) and optic (CN II) nerves
Anatomy clinical correlates: Oculomotor (CN III), trochlear (CN IV) and abducens (CN VI) nerves
Anatomy clinical correlates: Trigeminal nerve (CN V)
Anatomy clinical correlates: Facial (CN VII) and vestibulocochlear (CN VIII) nerves
Anatomy clinical correlates: Glossopharyngeal (CN IX), vagus (X), spinal accessory (CN XI) and hypoglossal (CN XII) nerves
Anatomy clinical correlates: Spinal cord pathways
Anatomy clinical correlates: Vertebral canal
Adult brain tumors: Pathology review
Amnesia, dissociative disorders and delirium: Pathology review
Cerebral vascular disease: Pathology review
Traumatic brain injury: Pathology review
Carotid artery stenosis screening: Clinical sciences
Acute stroke (ischemic or hemorrhagic) or TIA: Clinical sciences
Approach to acute vision loss: Clinical sciences
Approach to aphasia: Clinical sciences
Approach to blunt cerebrovascular injury: Clinical sciences
Approach to diplopia: Clinical sciences
Approach to traumatic brain injury (pediatrics): Clinical sciences
Approach to traumatic brain injury: Clinical sciences
Subarachnoid hemorrhage: Clinical sciences
Anti-parkinson medications
Anticonvulsants and anxiolytics: Barbiturates
Anticonvulsants and anxiolytics: Benzodiazepines
Antiplatelet medications
General anesthetics
Local anesthetics
Medications for neurodegenerative diseases
Migraine medications
Neuromuscular blockers
Nonbenzodiazepine anticonvulsants
Osmotic diuretics
Thrombolytics

Preoperative and postoperative care

Acid-base disturbances: Pathology review
Adrenal insufficiency: Pathology review
Coronary artery disease: Pathology review
Deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism: Pathology review
Diabetes mellitus: Pathology review
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Alcohol: Pathology review
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Hallucinogens: Pathology review
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Other depressants: Pathology review
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Stimulants: Pathology review
Electrolyte disturbances: Pathology review
Heart blocks: Pathology review
Heart failure: Pathology review
Obstructive lung diseases: Pathology review
Supraventricular arrhythmias: Pathology review
Thrombosis syndromes (hypercoagulability): Pathology review
Valvular heart disease: Pathology review
Ventricular arrhythmias: Pathology review
Acute coronary syndrome: Clinical sciences
Adrenal insufficiency: Clinical sciences
Alcohol use disorder: Clinical sciences
Alcohol withdrawal: Clinical sciences
Aortic stenosis: Clinical sciences
Approach to a postoperative fever: Clinical sciences
Approach to acid-base disorders: Clinical sciences
Approach to ascites: Clinical sciences
Approach to bradycardia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hypercalcemia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hyperkalemia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hypernatremia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hypocalcemia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hypokalemia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hyponatremia: Clinical sciences
Approach to lower limb edema: Clinical sciences
Approach to metabolic acidosis: Clinical sciences
Approach to metabolic alkalosis: Clinical sciences
Approach to nosocomial infections: Clinical sciences
Approach to postoperative abdominal pain: Clinical sciences
Approach to postoperative acute kidney injury: Clinical sciences
Approach to postoperative hypotension: Clinical sciences
Approach to postoperative respiratory distress: Clinical sciences
Approach to postoperative wound complications: Clinical sciences
Approach to respiratory acidosis: Clinical sciences
Approach to respiratory alkalosis: Clinical sciences
Approach to tachycardia: Clinical sciences
Asthma: Clinical sciences
Atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter: Clinical sciences
Atrioventricular block: Clinical sciences
Central line-associated bloodstream infection: Clinical sciences
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: Clinical sciences
Congestive heart failure: Clinical sciences
Coronary artery disease: Clinical sciences
Deep vein thrombosis: Clinical sciences
Delirium: Clinical sciences
Diabetes mellitus (Type 1): Clinical sciences
Diabetes mellitus (Type 2): Clinical sciences
Diabetic ketoacidosis: Clinical sciences
Essential hypertension: Clinical sciences
Hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state: Clinical sciences
Hypovolemic shock: Clinical sciences
Medication-induced constipation: Clinical sciences
Opioid intoxication and overdose: Clinical sciences
Opioid use disorder: Clinical sciences
Opioid withdrawal syndrome: Clinical sciences
Pressure-induced skin and soft tissue injury: Clinical sciences
Pulmonary embolism: Clinical sciences
Right heart failure (cor pulmonale): Clinical sciences
Substance use disorder: Clinical sciences
Surgical site infection: Clinical sciences
Tobacco use: Clinical sciences
Ventricular tachycardia: Clinical sciences
Acetaminophen (Paracetamol)
Anticoagulants: Direct factor inhibitors
Anticoagulants: Heparin
Anticoagulants: Warfarin
Antiplatelet medications
Cell wall synthesis inhibitors: Cephalosporins
DNA synthesis inhibitors: Metronidazole
Glucocorticoids
Insulins
Laxatives and cathartics
Miscellaneous cell wall synthesis inhibitors
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
Opioid agonists, mixed agonist-antagonists and partial agonists
Protein synthesis inhibitors: Aminoglycosides

Assessments

USMLE® Step 1 questions

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Questions

USMLE® Step 1 style questions USMLE

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A 55-year-old woman comes to the clinic for a follow-up appointment after a core-needle biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of breast cancer. The results are sent for further immunohistochemistry analysis. The patient would like to know the prognosis of her condition. Which of the following characteristics, if found, would confer the worst prognosis?  

Transcript

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64-year-old Cassie comes to the office because of a new breast mass that she found on her monthly self-examination.

A mammogram shows microcalcification clusters so an excisional biopsy is performed.

Pathology shows high-grade cells with central necrosis in the lumen and dystrophic calcification in the center of the ducts without invasion of the basement membrane.

Later that day, a 58-year-old named Linda comes to the physician's office with eczematous dermatitis of the left nipple and areolar area for the past 24 months.

Her history reveals that the lesion has been treated unsuccessfully with topical steroids and has progressively distorted the nipple, resulting in nipple inversion.

Physical examination reveals scaly, crusted, and deformed left nipple with multiple plaques overlying the surrounding areola.

At first glance, you’d think Cassie and Linda have nothing in common, but the fact is, they have different forms of breast cancer!

Breast cancer is the most common malignancy in women and it’s typically seen in postmenopausal women, over 50 years of age.

Most breast cancers are adenocarcinomas and they typically arise from the terminal duct lobular units.

Breast cancer can present as a palpable hard mass, most commonly located in the upper outer quadrant of the breast.

Now, some breast cancers can be associated with amplification and overexpression of genes for estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, and HER2/neu receptors.

For your exam, you have to remember that these receptors are important therapeutic and prognostic factors of breast cancer.

In other words, breast cancers that are associated with overexpression of estrogen and progesterone receptors are more susceptible to anti-estrogen medications, such as tamoxifen.

On the other hand, HER2/neu receptors, also known as erbB2 receptors, are coded by the ERB-B2 gene.

These receptors are transmembrane glycoproteins with tyrosine kinase activity that plays an important role in epithelial growth and differentiation.

HER2/neu receptors are present in small amounts in normal breast and ovarian cells; while they are overexpressed in 25-30% of breast cancers as well as in adenocarcinomas of the ovary, lung, stomach, and salivary glands.

Moreover, breast cancers that are associated with HER2/neu positivity are linked to more aggressive tumors; however, they are more likely to respond to anti-HER-2 monoclonal antibodies, like trastuzumab.

Another high-yield fact is that breast cancers that are estrogen negative, progesterone negative, and HER2/neu negative, or in other words, triple-negative, are linked to a more aggressive form of breast cancer.

Finally, breast cancer tends to metastasize first to the axillary lymph nodes, while in the later stages, the most common sites of metastases include lungs, liver, and bones.

Now, switching gears and moving on to risk factors!

The most common risk factors in females include advanced age and family history of breast cancer, which is considered the strongest risk factor.

The risk of hereditary breast cancer is increased even more in young women who have had more than one close relative with premenopausal breast cancer.

Also, a family history of ovarian cancer is linked to an increased risk for ovarian and breast cancer, because both of these cancers are associated with autosomal dominant mutations of BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes. BRCA genes codes for BRCA proteins that acts as a tumor suppressor that controls the cell cycle, helps repair DNA, and regulates transcription of DNA.

Moreover, women with the BRCA1 mutation have a 70-80% higher risk for developing breast cancer; and a 40% increased risk for developing ovarian cancer compared to women without the BRCA1 mutation.

Another commonly high yield factor on your exam is increased estrogen exposure like nulliparity, late first pregnancy, early menarche, and late menopause.

Other risk factors include alcohol consumption, absence of breastfeeding, and obesity in postmenopausal women.

Remember that after menopause, estrogen levels typically drop, but adipose tissue converts androstenedione to estrone, which is a weak estrogen.

Finally, you shouldn’t forget the influence of race in breast cancer:

Caucasians are at the highest risk while people of African descent are at increased risk for the development of triple-negative breast cancer.

Alternatively, risk factors for breast cancer in men include BRCA2 mutation and Klinefelter syndrome.

In terms of screening and diagnosis, according to the American Cancer Society guidelines, women aged 45-54 years should also undergo screening mammography every year.

If a breast mass is palpated during physical exam, a woman should undergo mammography which is the initial imaging technique used for palpable breast lesions in women older than 35 years.

Clinicians can also use needle biopsy to evaluate suspicious breast lesion since this is the most specific diagnostic tool.

As far as the treatment goes, breast cancer is treated with surgery, radiation therapy, and systemic therapy.

Surgical management of breast cancer can be performed as a radical mastectomy, which stands for removal of one or both breasts; or breast-conserving, which stands for removal of cancerous tissue while avoiding mastectomy.

Chemotherapy agents include trastuzumab, a monoclonal antibody against HER-2/neu receptors and tamoxifen, which is a selective estrogen receptor modulator.

Finally, aromatase inhibitors like anastrozole can also be used to treat estrogen receptor positive breast cancers in postmenopausal individuals.

Now breast cancer can be subdivided into non-invasive and invasive breast cancers.

First, let’s start with non-invasive breast cancers.

Now, remember that at the time when they are found, they have not crossed the basement membrane and invaded other tissue.

These include ductal carcinoma in situ, Paget disease of the breast, and lobular carcinoma in situ.

Ductal carcinoma in situ, or DCIS, is a precancerous lesion characterized by a mass of neoplastic cells that arise from epithelial cells in the terminal duct lobular unit.

As they proliferate, neoplastic cells fill the lumen of the duct, but at the same time, they do not invade into the basement membrane, which is why they are “in situ”.

In most cases, DCIS affects only one ductal system; but in some individuals, it can present as a more extensive lesion that spread to surrounding breast tissue.

In addition, DCIS accounts for 15-30% of all carcinomas found on screening mammograms; and 50% of all carcinomas identified on diagnostic mammograms.

Now there are two subtypes of ductal carcinoma in situ: comedo DCIS and non-comedo DCIS.

Comedo DCIS, also referred to as comedocarcinoma, is associated with solid sheets of pleomorphic, high-grade malignant cells, which indicate that this cancer is growing rapidly.

Moreover, central malignant cells can die and result in central necrosis, which can eventually calcify and form dystrophic calcifications.

Additional findings can include chronic inflammation and periductal concentric fibrosis.

Finally, if left untreated, malignant cells can eventually penetrate the basement membrane and invade the surrounding breast tissue, forming a poorly defined palpable breast nodule.

So for your exam, you have to remember that comedocarcinoma typically does not produce a mass lesion unless it has invaded the surrounding breast tissue; instead, it’s most commonly identified as microcalcification clusters on mammography.

In contrast to comedo DCIS, non-comedo DCIS is not associated with central necrosis and it’s subdivided into three types: papillary and micropapillary DCIS, which are characterized by malignant cells that are arranged in a finger-like pattern within the duct; cribriform DCIS, which is characterized by gaps between malignant cells; and solid DCIS, where cancer cells completely fill the duct.

The next non-invasive breast malignant condition is Paget disease of the breast!

Paget disease occurs when ductal carcinoma, either in situ or invasive, extends up to the lactiferous ducts and into the nipple and areola.

So, you have to know that women with this condition typically present with an eczematous skin lesion or persistent dermatitis in the nipple and adjacent areas.

The diagnosis of Paget disease of the breast is established by obtaining a biopsy, but women with Paget disease must undergo mammography to detect the presence of underlying breast cancer.

Sources

  1. "Robbins Basic Pathology" Elsevier (2017)
  2. "Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Twentieth Edition (Vol.1 & Vol.2)" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  3. "Variation of Breast Cancer Risk Among BRCA1/2 Carriers" JAMA (2008)
  4. "Diagnostic value of vacuum-assisted breast biopsy for breast carcinoma: a meta-analysis and systematic review" Breast Cancer Research and Treatment (2010)
  5. "Estrogen and progesterone receptors in breast cancer" Future Oncology (2014)
  6. "Ductal carcinoma in situ of breast: update 2019" Pathology (2019)