Title: Breast Cancer
1 2BREAST CANCERWorldwide incidence in females
Incidence per 100,000 population.
Parkin DM, et al. CA Cancer J Clin. 19994933-64.
3BREAST CANCERAge-specific incidence (per 100,000)
New Horizons in Cancer Management, SRI
International, 1990.
4BREAST CANCERCumulative probability of
developing breast cancer
Feuer EJ, et al, JNCI. 1993.
5BREAST CANCERStage at diagnosis by race
Categories do not total 100 because staging
information is not available for all cases.
Greenlee RT, et al. CA Cancer J Clin.
20015115-36.
6BREAST CANCER5-year relative survival rate by
ethnicity
Greenlee RT, et al. CA Cancer J Clin.
20015115-36.
7BREAST CANCERNatural history
- Highly variable course
- Relatively slow growth rate
- Generally present several years before time of
diagnosis - Long preclinical period potentially enables early
detection - Median survival gt2 years in patients receiving
conventional treatment for metastatic disease
Osteen RT. American Cancer Society Textbook of
Clinical Oncology. 3rd ed. 2001251-268.
8BREAST CANCERRisk factors
- Age
- Family history of breast cancer
- Prior personal history of breast cancer
- Increased estrogen exposure
- Early menarche
- Late menopause
- Hormone replacement therapy/oral contraceptives
- Nulliparity
- First pregnancy after age 30
- Diet and lifestyle (obesity, excessive alcohol
consumption) - Radiation exposure before age 40
- Prior benign or premalignant breast changes
- In situ cancer
- Atypical hyperplasia
- Radial scar
Osteen RT. American Cancer Society Textbook of
Clinical Oncology. 3rd ed. 2001251-268.Winer
EP, et al. Cancer Principles Practice of
Oncology. 6th ed. 20011651-1717.
9BREAST CANCERRisk factors
Breast self-examination Examination Mammographyth
e by physician only modality shown to
decrease mortality
10BREAST CANCERScreening (high-risk)
- Annual mammography, beginning 5 yrs before age
of youngest affected relative at time of
diagnosis - Target population
- ) High familial risk
- ) BRCA 1/2-positive
Tripathy D, Henderson IC. Current Cancer
Therapeutics. 3rd ed. 1999123-129.
11BREAST CANCERBreast inspection
12BREAST CANCERBreast palpation
13BREAST CANCERRegional node assessment
14BREAST CANCERScreening mammography
- Reduces mortality by approximately
- 25-30 in women in their 50s
- 18 in women in their 40s
- Supports view that early diagnosis and treatment
can prevent metastases - ACS recommends annual mammogram starting at age
40
Rimer BK, et al. Cancer Principles Practice of
Oncology. 6th ed. 2001627-640. Smith RA.
American Cancer Society Textbook of Clinical
Oncology. 3rd ed. 200175-121.
15BREAST CANCERHorizontal mammography
16BREAST CANCERVertical mammography
17BREAST CANCERSigns and symptoms at presentation
18BREAST CANCER
19BREAST CANCERMammography
20BREAST CANCERUltrasonography
21BREAST CANCERLiver metastases
22BREAST CANCERMRI scanBone metastasis
23BREAST CANCERDiagnostic pathway
24BREAST CANCERBiopsy techniques for palpable and
mammographically detected masses
- Excisional biopsy (usually outpatient)
- Tumor size and histologic diagnosis
- Core-cutting needle biopsy (in-office)
- Histological diagnosis
- Fine-needle aspiration (in-office)
- Cytological diagnosis
Winer E, et al. Cancer Principles Practice of
Oncology. 6th ed. 20011651-1717.
25BREAST CANCERFine-needle aspiration biopsy
26BREAST CANCERPathology
- Non-invasive carcinoma in situ
- Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)
- Lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS)
- Invasive carcinoma
- Infiltrating ductal or lobular carcinoma
- Medullary, mucinous, and tubular carcinomas
- Uncommon tumors
- Inflammatory carcinoma
- Pagets disease
Dollinger M, et al. Everyones Guide to Cancer
Therapy. 1997356-384.
27BREAST CANCERPathology Non-invasive DCIS LCIS
DCIS LCIS Abnormal mammogram Microscopic
characterization on biopsy Clustered
microcalcifications Solid proliferation of small
or non-palpable masses cells with uniform
round to oval nuclei 30 risk of invasive
cancer 37 chance of subsequentat 10 years at or
near invasive cancer original biopsy site
DCIS ductal carcinoma in situ. LCIS lobular
carcinoma in situ.
Winer E, et al. Cancer Principles Practice of
Oncology. 6th ed. 20011651-1717. Love S, Barsky
SH. Cancer Treatment. 4th ed. 1995337-340.
28BREAST CANCERIncidence of major histologic types
Percent of all invasive carcinomas
Hendersn IC. American Cancer Society Textbook
Clinical Oncology. 2nd ed. 1995198-219.
29BREAST CANCERInvasive ductal carcinoma
30BREAST CANCERAnatomical site
31BREAST CANCERSpread to lymph nodes
32BREAST CANCERSites of distant metastases
33BREAST CANCERTNM stage grouping
Note T1 includes T1 mic. Note The
prognosis of patients with N1a is similar to that
of patients with pN0.
AJCC Cancer Staging Manual, 5th edition (1997)
published by Lippincott-Raven Publishers,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
34BREAST CANCERTumor definitions
- TX Primary tumor cannot be assessed
- T0 No evidence of primary tumor
- Tis Carcinoma in situ Intraductal carcinoma,
lobular carcinoma in situ, or Pagets disease
of the nipple with no tumor - T1 Tumor 2 cm or less in its greatest
diameter T1mic Microinvasion more than 0.1 cm or
less in its greatest diameter - T1a Tumor more than 0.1 cm but not more than
0.5 cm in its greatest diameter - T1b Tumor more than 0.5 cm but not more than 1
cm in its greatest diameter - T1c Tumor more than 1 cm but not more than 2 cm
in its greatest diameter - T2 Tumor more than 2 cm but not more than 5 cm in
its greatest diameter - T3 Tumor more than 5 cm in its greatest diameter
- T4 Tumor of any size with direct extension to (a)
chest wall or (b) skin, only as described below - T4a Extension to chest wall
- T4b Edema (including peau dorange) or
ulceration of the skin of the breast or
satellite skin nodules confined to the same
breast - T4c Both (T4a and T4b)
- T4d Inflammatory carcinoma
AJCC Cancer Staging Manual, 5th edition (1997)
published by Lippincott-Raven Publishers,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
35BREAST CANCERStage I
T1 N0 M0
T1a T ? 0.5 cm T1b 0.5 cm lt T ? 1 cm T1c 1
cm lt T ? 2 cm
T1
T ? 2 cm
N0 no regional lymph node metastasisM0 no
distant metastasis
36BREAST CANCERStage IIA
37BREAST CANCERStage IIB
38BREAST CANCERStage IIIA
39BREAST CANCERStage IIIB
40BREAST CANCERStage IV
41BREAST CANCERCommonly assessed prognostic factors
Nuclear grade Estrogen/progesteronereceptors HER2
/neu overexpression
Number of positive axillary nodes Tumor
size Lymphatic and vascular invasion Histologic
tumor type Histologic grade
Slamon DJ. Chemotherapy Foundation.
199946. Winer E, et al. Cancer Principles
Practice of Oncology. 6th ed. 20011651-1717.
42BREAST CANCER5-year survival as function of the
number of positive axillary lymph nodes
Harris J, et al. Cancer Principles Practice of
Oncology. 5th ed. 19971557-1616.
43BREAST CANCERHER-2/neu overexpression
- HER-2/neu gene is overexpressed in 25 to 30 of
breast cancer patients - There is a significant decrease of 5-year
survival in breast cancer patients whose tumors
overexpress HER-2/neu - This decrease in 5-year survival is significant
for both node-positive and node-negative patients
- In vitro studies show that HER-2/neu
overexpression increases the following cell
activities in malignant breast epithelial cells - DNA synthesis
- Cell growth
- Anchorage-dependent growth
- Tumorgencity
- Metastatic potential
Slamon DJ. Chemotherapy Foundation Symposium.
199946. Abstract 39. Goldenberg MM. Clinical
Therapeutics. 199921(2)309-318.