Breast benign disorders pathology

36

Click here to load reader

description

Useful for students of pathology.

Transcript of Breast benign disorders pathology

Page 1: Breast benign disorders pathology

Dr.P.Karpagam Kiruba Rajeswari,M.B.B.S,D.C.P.,Tutor in Pathology,

MAPIMS.

Page 2: Breast benign disorders pathology

ANATOMY OF BREASTModified apocrine sweat glands.

Breast parenchyma 12 to 20 lobes.

Within each lobe – Lactiferous duct - branches repeatedly leads to no. of terminal ducts each leads to a lobule contains multiple acini/alveoli TDLU (TERMINAL DUCT + LOBULE)

Spaces around the lobules and ducts and between the lobes are filled with fatty tissue, ligaments and connective tissue STROMA

Page 3: Breast benign disorders pathology

LYMPHATIC DRAINAGEOF BREAST

Page 4: Breast benign disorders pathology

NORMAL HISTOLOGY OF THE BREAST2 cell types – line ducts &

lobules.

1. Contractile MYOEPITHELIAL CELLS lie on the BM assist in milk ejection during lactation & provides structural support to the lobules

2.EPITHELIAL CELLS Luminal – produce milk.

Epithelial & Myoepithelial cells lie on the basement membrane.

Page 5: Breast benign disorders pathology
Page 6: Breast benign disorders pathology

NORMAL HISTOLOGY OF THE BREAST2 types of breast

STROMA:

1.INTERLOBULAR STROMA Dense fibrous connective tissue + adipose tissue.

2.INTRALOBULAR STROMA Envelopes the acini + hormonally responsive fibroblast – like cells + scattered lymphocytes.

Page 7: Breast benign disorders pathology
Page 8: Breast benign disorders pathology
Page 9: Breast benign disorders pathology
Page 10: Breast benign disorders pathology

ACUTE MASTITISFirst month of breast feeding.

Cracks / fissures in the nipple portal of entry of bacteria.

Breast erythematous,painful,fever +nt.

MORPHOLOGY: Staph. Inf. localized area of inflammation.

Strep. Inf. Diffuse, spreading.

HPE: Involved breast tissue – necrotic, neutrophil

infiltration.

Treated with antibiotics, continuous milk expression. Rarely surgical drainage.

Page 11: Breast benign disorders pathology
Page 12: Breast benign disorders pathology

PERIDUCTAL MASTITIS Recurrent subareolar abscess/

Squamous metaplasia of lactiferous ducts/ Zuska ds.

Painful erythematous subareolar mass.

90% cases – assoc. with smoking Vit.A def./toxic substances in smoke – alters epithelial differentiation.

Recurrent cases – fistula occurs. HPE : Keratinizing squamous

metaplasia of ducts. Keratin shed from the cellsplugs the ductal system dilation & rupture of duct.

Periductal tissue keratin spill chronic granulomatous inflammatory response.

Treatment: En bloc surgical removal of the involved duct, fistula. Antibiotics for secondary bacterial infection.

Page 13: Breast benign disorders pathology

DUCT ECTASIA 5th – 6th decade, multiparous women.

Cl.features: Poorly palpable periareolar mass, thick white secretions from nipple, skin retraction.

HPE: Dilated ducts filled by granular debris numerous lipid-laden macrophages, inspissation of breast secretions, marked periductal and interductal ( dense )infiltrate of lymphocytes and macrophages, and variable numbers of plasma cells.

Eventual fibrosis skin & nipple retraction. Principal significance produces an irregular palpable mass - mimics the mammographic appearance of carcinoma.

Page 14: Breast benign disorders pathology

DUCT ECTASIA

Dilated duct with surrounding fibrosis and chronic inflammation. Lumen of the duct eosinophilic secretion & markedly attenuated epithelium.

Page 15: Breast benign disorders pathology

FAT NECROSIS Cl.features: H/o breast trauma /

prior surgery.

Painless palpable mass, skin thickening or retraction, a mammographic density, or calcifications.

Acute lesions hemorrhagic + central areas of liquefactive fat necrosis.

Subacute lesions - areas of fat necrosis ill-defined, firm, gray-white nodules containing small chalky-white foci or dark hemorrhagic debris. Central region of necrotic fat cells intense neutrophilic infiltrate + macrophages.

Proliferating fibroblasts + new vessels + chronic inflammatory cells surround the injured area Giant cells, calcifications, and hemosiderin appear focus - replaced by scar tissue.

Page 16: Breast benign disorders pathology

FAT NECROSIS

Page 17: Breast benign disorders pathology

GRANULOMATOUS MASTITISRare.

CAUSES:1. Systemic granulomatous

ds. Sarcoidosis, Wegener’s.

2. Granulomatous inf. d/t Mycobacteria, Fungi.

GRANULOMATOUS LOBULAR MASTITIS – Parous women, confined to lobules, d/t hypersensitivity reactions to the antigens – expressed by the lobular epithelium during lactation.

Page 18: Breast benign disorders pathology
Page 19: Breast benign disorders pathology

Benign alterations – in ducts & lobules:Detected by mammography/incidental

findings in surgical specimens.Based on the risk of developing Breast

Cancer – 3 groups:

Page 20: Breast benign disorders pathology

FIBROCYSTIC CHANGEMost common benign

breast condition. Primarily affects

terminal duct–lobular unit (TDLU).

Pathogenesis Obscure – hormones (estrogen) -play a role.

Clinical featuresIncidence: 10 – 20 %

of adult women.Age : 25 – 45 yrs.Usually bilateral.Vague ‘lumpy’

Morphology: ‘3 principle

changes’

Page 21: Breast benign disorders pathology

FIBROCYSTIC CHANGE – CYSTS Dilation & unfolding of lobules small cysts –

coalesce large cysts. Unopened cysts

turbid ,semi translucent fluid brown/blue colour BLUE – DOME CYSTS.

Lined by flattened atrophic epithelium/metaplastic apocrine cells (Abundant granular eosinophilic cytoplasm + round nuclei).

Calcification – common. “MILK OF CALCIUM” –

Mammographers Diagnosis – confirmed –

disappearance of the cyst after FNAC.

Page 22: Breast benign disorders pathology

FIBROCYSTIC CHANGE - FIBROSISCysts rupture

Secretory material

Adjacent stroma

Chronic inflammation, Fibrosis

Palpable firmness of the breast

Page 23: Breast benign disorders pathology

FIBROCYSTIC CHANGE - ADENOSISIncrease in the number

of acini per lobule.Pregnancy Normal

physiologic adenosis. Nonpregnant women

adenosis - focal change. Acini – enlarged,not

distorted (blunt-duct adenosis).

Calcifications – occasionally - within the lumens.

Acini - lined by columnar cells benign / atypical features (“flat epithelial atypia”) Earliest recognizable precursor of epithelial neoplasia

Page 24: Breast benign disorders pathology

LACTATIONAL ADENOMASPalpable masses –

pregnant/lactating women.

Normal appearing breast tissue + physiological adenosis + lactational changes.

Exagerrated focal response to hormones.

Gross appearance: Well circumscribed mass - distinct lobular configuration, yellowish color, and marked vascularization.

C/s: Gray / tan. Necrotic changes frequent.

HPE:Proliferated glands lined by actively secreting cuboidal cells

Page 25: Breast benign disorders pathology
Page 26: Breast benign disorders pathology

PROLIFERATIVE BREAST DISEASE WITHOUT ATYPIA

Mammographic densities, calcifications, or as incidental findings in specimens from biopsies.

Found alone/assoc. with non prolif. breast changes.

Lesions proliferation of ductal epithelium and/or stroma without cytologic or architectural features suggestive of carcinoma in situ.

Page 27: Breast benign disorders pathology

MORPHOLOGY – Epithelial hyperplasia

Normal breast ducts & lobules – double layer of epithelial cells luminal & myoepithelial layers.

Epith.hyperplasia Incidental finding - > 2 layers – luminal & myoepithelial cells fill,distend ducts & lobules.

Irregular lumens – periphery of the cellular masses.

Page 28: Breast benign disorders pathology

Sclerosing AdenosisPalpable mass, a radiologic

density, or calcifications.

No. of acini per terminal duct - increased to double the number found in uninvolved lobules.

Normal lobular arrangement - maintained.

Acini - compressed and distorted in the central portions of the lesion & characteristically dilated at the periphery.

Myoepithelial cells - prominent.

NORMAL

ADENOSIS

Page 29: Breast benign disorders pathology

Complex sclerosing lesionRadial sclerosing lesion

(“radial scar”) - commonly occurring benign lesion forms - irregular masses (mimic invasive carcinoma)mammographically, grossly, and histologically.

Central nidus of entrapped glands in a hyalinized stroma with long radiating projections into stroma.

Radial scar – misnomer (lesions - not assoc. with prior trauma or surgery)

Page 30: Breast benign disorders pathology

Papillomas Multiple branching fibro vascular cores,

each with a connective tissue axis lined by luminal and myoepithelial cells.

Growth - within a dilated duct. Epithelial hyperplasia and apocrine

metaplasia - frequently present.

Large duct papillomas - solitary, situated in the lactiferous sinuses of the nipple.

Small duct papillomas - multiple - located deeper within the ductal system.

> 80% of large duct papillomas nipple

discharge.

Large papillomas torsion of stalk infarction bloody discharge.

Intermittent blockage and release of normal breast secretions or irritation of the duct by the papilloma Non bloody discharge.

Others + nt as small palpable masses, or as densities or calcifications seen on mammograms

Page 31: Breast benign disorders pathology

Atypical ductal/lobular hyperplasia Cellular proliferation - resembles carcinoma in situ - but lacks sufficient qualitative or quantitative features for diagnosis as carcinoma.

Page 32: Breast benign disorders pathology

ATYPICAL DUCTAL HYPERPLASIA

Found in Bx specimens – done for calcifications,mammographic densities,palpable masses.

Relatively monomorphic proliferation of regularly spaced cells, sometimes with cribriform spaces.Limited in extent, only partially filling ducts.

Duct is filled with a mixed population of cells oriented columnar cells at the periphery and more rounded cells within the central portion. Some of the spaces - round and regular, the peripheral spaces - irregular and slitlike Highly Atypical.

Page 33: Breast benign disorders pathology

ATYPICAL LOBULAR HYPERPLASIAProliferation of cells the

cells do not fill or distend more than 50% of the acini within a lobule.

Atypical lobular hyperplasia also involves contiguous ducts through pagetoid spread( discrete intraepidermal proliferation of cells occurring singly/ nests at all levels of the epidermis) in which atypical lobular cells lie between the ductal basement membrane and overlying normal ductal epithelial cells.

A population of monomorphic small, round, loosely cohesive cells partially fill a lobule. Some intracellular lumens can be seen

Page 34: Breast benign disorders pathology
Page 35: Breast benign disorders pathology
Page 36: Breast benign disorders pathology