Duct ectasia of breast
Duct ectasia of breast | |
---|---|
Classification and external resources | |
Specialty | urology |
ICD-10 | N60.4 |
ICD-9-CM | 610.4 |
DiseasesDB | 3994 |
eMedicine | Breast Disorders/topic.htm Pediatric Breast Disorders/ |
Duct ectasia of the breast or mammary duct ectasia or plasma cell mastitis is a condition in which the lactiferous duct becomes blocked or clogged.This is the most common cause of greenish discharge.[1] Mammary duct ectasia can mimic breast cancer. It is a disorder of peri- or post-menopausal age.[2]
Duct ectasia syndrome is a synonym for nonpuerperal mastitis but the term has also been occasionally used to describe special cases of fibrocystic diseases, mastalgia or as a wastebasket definition of benign breast disease.
Correlation of duct widening with the "classical" symptoms of duct ectasia syndrome is unclear. However, duct widening was recently very strongly correlated with noncyclic breast pain.[3]
Duct diameter is naturally variable, subject to hormonal interactions. Duct ectasia syndrome in the classical meaning is associated with additional histological changes.
Terminology
The term has several meanings on histological and symptomatic levels and on both levels usage overlaps with mastalgia, fibrocystic disease and specific sub- or superclasses of nonpuerperal mastitis. While this is not ideal for a definition it results from actual usage in international literature. Because research literature regarding duct ectasia is anything but abundant it is probably easiest to determine the exact meaning(s) intended by the respective authors on a case by case basis and this section can offer only a few hints.
Typical usage in North America is a synonym of nonpuerperal mastitis, including the special cases of granulomatous mastitis, comedo mastitis, subareolar abscess with or without squamous metaplasia of lactiferous ducts and fistulation.[4]
Simple duct widening should be carefully distinguished from more complex histological changes.
Pathogenesis
The duct widening is commonly believed to be a result of secretory stasis, including stagnant colostrum, which also causes periductal inflammation and fibrosis. However, because nonspecific duct widening is common it might be also coincidental finding in many processes.
Smokers seem more often affected by duct ectasia syndrome although the reported results are not entirely consistent. The correlation with smoking status appears weaker than for subareolar abscess. Correlation with the actual duct widening is not known.
Both duct widening and duct ectasia syndrome are frequently bilateral, hence systemic causes are likely involved.
Symptomatology
Signs of duct ectasia can include nipple retraction, inversion, pain,[5] and sometimes bloody discharge.
Diagnosis
Noninvasive methods to determine duct diameter in live patients are available only recently and it is not clear how the results should be compared with older results from biopsies.
Histologically, dilation of the large duct is prominent. Duct widening with associated periductal fibrosis is frequently included in the wastebasket definition of fibrocystic disease.
In plasma cell rich lesions diagnosed on core biopsies, steroid-responsive IgG4-related mastitis can be identified by IgG/IgG4 immunostaining.[6]
Duct Ectasia Syndrome
The term duct ectasia syndrome has been used to describe symptoms of nonpuerperal mastitis, possibly associated with nipple inversion and nipple discharge. In some contexts, it was used to describe a particular form of nonpuerperal mastitis coincident with fibrocystic disease, frequently involving pasty (coloured) nipple discharge, nipple retraction, retroareolar abscess and blue dome cysts. Abscessation is not very frequent but by some definitions recurrent subareolar abscess is merely a variant of duct ectasia syndrome - abscessation would be obviously more frequent with this definition.
Duct ectasia syndrome has been associated with histopathological findings that are distinct from a simple duct widening. In addition to nonspecific duct widening the myoepithelial cell layer is atrophic, missing or replaced by fibrous tissue. The original cuboidal epithelial layer may be also severely impaired or missing. Characteristic calcifications are often visible on mammographic images.
Periductal mastitis, comedo mastitis, secretory disease of the breast, plasma cell mastitis and mastitis obliterans are sometimes considered special cases or synonyms of duct ectasia syndrome.
Prognosis
The condition is usually self-limiting, and thus not indicated for surgery.
References
- ↑ "Mammary duct ectasia - MayoClinic.com".
- ↑ "Nipple Problems and Discharge". The Johns Hopkins University,. Retrieved 22 April 2014.
- ↑ Peters F, Diemer P, Mecks O, Behnken L LJ (2003). "Severity of mastalgia in relation to milk duct dilatation". Obstet Gynecol 101 (1): 54–60. doi:10.1016/S0029-7844(02)02386-4. PMID 12517645.
- ↑ "Mammary Duct Ectasia: Stanford University criteria". May 27, 2006.
- ↑ Browning J, Bigrigg A, Taylor I (December 1986). "Symptomatic and incidental mammary duct ectasia". J R Soc Med 79 (12): 715–6. PMC 1290571. PMID 3806542.
- ↑ Chougule A, Bal A, Das A, Singh G (January 2015). "IgG4 related sclerosing mastitis: expanding the morphological spectrum of IgG4 related diseases". Pathology 47 (1): 27–33. doi:10.1097/PAT.0000000000000187. PMID 25474510.
|