The anatomy of fluid-yielding ducts in breast cancer

被引:0
|
作者
Dominique Twelves
Ashutosh Nerurkar
Peter Osin
Ann Ward
Clare M. Isacke
Gerald P. H. Gui
机构
[1] Academic Surgery (Breast Unit),Department of Histopathology
[2] Breakthrough Breast Cancer,undefined
[3] Institute of Cancer Research,undefined
[4] Royal Marsden NHS Trust,undefined
来源
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2012年 / 132卷
关键词
Breast cancer; Duct lavage; Resin perfusion; Anatomy;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The concept of an intraductal approach to evaluate the breast microenvironment assumes direct access to the cancer-containing duct. Central duct access to the cancer-affected lobe is essential if cytology or cell markers are to be useful indicators of pre-malignant change. Access to the cancer-bearing lobe would be less important if field change effects of malignant change were predominantly supra-lobar. The aim of this study was to determine how often duct lavage fluid drains the breast cancer-affected segment. 58 patients undergoing mastectomy for breast cancer were recruited among which 47 had at least one fluid-yielding duct. Following duct lavage, fluid-yielding ducts were perfused ex vivo with Polyurethane Elastomer (PU4ii) resin. Specimens were sliced sagittally, and the extent of resin perfusion and anatomical relationship to the cancer-affected segment was recorded. Computed tomography (CT) scanning was performed on selected mastectomies before cut-up for a feasibility study of 3D duct reconstruction. The median number of fluid-yielding ducts cannulated per cancer-affected breast was 2 (range 1–4). 35/47 (74%) mastectomy specimens were successfully cannulated for resin perfusion. 29/35 (83%) showed tracing of the cancer-affected duct system, 6/35 resin perfusions traced duct systems unaffected by cancer and 12/35 perfusions extravasated. The proportion of sagittal breast slices perfused by resin was 13–68% (median 43%). Volume rendering CT showed it is feasible to produce a simulated image of the perfused ducts. Duct access to the cancer-containing segment is feasible in the majority of patients. Fluid-yielding ducts proportionately drain a significant volume of the breast. Large symptomatic cancers may cause obstruction with distal collapse. Further quantitative study of breast perfusion CT scans may be helpful for estimating the volume fraction of breast tissue perfused by fluid-yielding ducts. The intraductal approach is a valid concept for biomarker assessment of cancer-containing breast segments.
引用
收藏
页码:555 / 564
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Human breast duct anatomy, the 'sick lobe' hypothesis and intraductal approaches to breast cancer
    Going, JJ
    Mohun, TJ
    BREAST CANCER RESEARCH AND TREATMENT, 2006, 97 (03) : 285 - 291
  • [12] Human breast duct anatomy, the ‘sick lobe’ hypothesis and intraductal approaches to breast cancer
    James J. Going
    Timothy J. Mohun
    Breast Cancer Research and Treatment, 2006, 97 : 285 - 291
  • [13] Rethinking the Local Therapy of Breast Cancer: Integration of Biology and Anatomy
    Monica Morrow
    Annals of Surgical Oncology, 2015, 22 : 3168 - 3173
  • [14] A direct comparative study of methylation-specific PCR in ductal lavage fluid, breast cancer tissue, normal breast parenchyma and plasma in women with early breast cancer
    GPH Gui
    D Twelves
    A Nerurkar
    P Osin
    A Ward
    T Crook
    CM Isacke
    BMC Proceedings, 3 (Suppl 5)
  • [15] Resolving breast cancer heterogeneity by searching reliable protein cancer biomarkers in the breast fluid secretome
    Ferdinando Mannello
    Daniela Ligi
    BMC Cancer, 13
  • [16] Breast Development and Anatomy
    Pandya, Sonali
    Moore, Richard G.
    CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2011, 54 (01) : 91 - 95
  • [17] Breast Anatomy for the Interventionalist
    Jesinger, Robert A.
    TECHNIQUES IN VASCULAR AND INTERVENTIONAL RADIOLOGY, 2014, 17 (01) : 3 - 9
  • [18] Spontaneous Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea in a Patient With Breast Cancer
    Wang, Min
    Ye, Huiping
    JOURNAL OF CRANIOFACIAL SURGERY, 2023, 34 (03) : E304 - E306
  • [19] Molecular analysis of nipple fluid for breast cancer screening
    Suijkerbuijk, Karijn P. M.
    van der Wall, Elsken
    Vooijs, Marc
    van Diest, Paul J.
    PATHOBIOLOGY, 2008, 75 (02) : 149 - 152
  • [20] Exosomal miRNAs in nipple aspirate fluid and breast cancer
    Qin, Wenyi
    Zhang, Kurt
    Sauter, Edward R.
    TRANSLATIONAL CANCER RESEARCH, 2017, 6 : S1304 - S1310