| Literature DB >> 34973083 |
R Jagsi1, G Mason2,3, B A Overmoyer4, W A Woodward5, S Badve6, R J Schneider7, J E Lang8, M Alpaugh9, K P Williams10, D Vaught11, A Smith11, K Smith11, K D Miller12.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Inflammatory breast cancer is a deadly and aggressive type of breast cancer. A key challenge relates to the need for a more detailed, formal, objective definition of IBC, the lack of which compromises clinical care, hampers the conduct of clinical trials, and hinders the search for IBC-specific biomarkers and treatments because of the heterogeneity of patients considered to have IBC.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical diagnosis; Diagnostic criteria; Inflammatory breast cancer; Molecular markers; Pathology
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34973083 PMCID: PMC8926970 DOI: 10.1007/s10549-021-06434-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 0167-6806 Impact factor: 4.872
Proposed scoring system for inflammatory breast cancer diagnosis
| Characteristic | Score | Priority factor (multiplier) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 2 | 1 | ||
| Timing of signs/symptoms | ≤3 months | 3–6 months | >6 months | ×3 |
| Skin changes | Any peau d’orange | Skin edema/thickening* ver ≥ 1/3 of the breast | Focal skin edema/thickening* (<1/3 of the breast) | ×3 |
| Swelling/engorgement of the breast | Clinically apparent enlargement of the breast or new asymmetry in breast size | Breast edema identified on imaging but not clinically detectable | ×3 | |
| Erythema or other skin discoloration: pink, red, darkened, bruising/purplish, or serpiginous in character | Complete or near complete involvement of the breast | Not nearly complete but greater than minimal involvement of the breast | Minimal involvement or ambiguous color change | ×2 |
| Nipple abnormalities | New nipple inversion | New nipple flattening or other asymmetry | Crusting of the nipple/areola without other nipple changes | ×2 |
| Lymphatic tumor cell emboli | Dermal lymphatic emboli present (without evidence of direct involvement of the dermis or epidermis) | Non-dermal lymphatic emboli present (breast parenchyma or stroma) | ×2 | |
| Breast imaging | Diffuse involvement of breast parenchyma (with or without dominant mass) | Enlargement of non-axillary nodes (internal mammary, supraclavicular, subpectoral, etc.) | ×1 | |
Clinical, pathologic, and imaging characteristics are listed in rows with a graded scoring system of 1–3 listed in columns, where 3 is definitively associated with inflammatory breast cancer and 1 less specific for IBC compared with non-inflammatory locally advanced breast cancer. If a characteristic it is totally absent, enter a score of zero. If statements in multiple columns describe the patient presentation, the highest scoring column should be selected. The priority factor in the far-right column represents how some characteristics are more heavily weighted for inflammatory breast cancer and thus represent a multiplying factor. The score for each characteristic is multiplied by the priority factor, then the subtotals of all the characteristics are added together to yield a total score (Total IBC Value). The Total IBC Value provides a score for use in identifying inflammatory breast cancer. Boxes marked “Intentionally blank” are not factored into the score. Proposed classifications of the Total IBC Scores are DEFINITELY IBC (total score ≥ 42); STRONG POSSIBILITY of IBC (total score 25–41); WEAK POSSIBILITY of IBC (total score 14–24); and NOT IBC (total score < 14)
*Skin thickening may be assessed on clinical examination or observed on breast imaging
Fig. 1Clinical characteristics of Inflammatory Breast Cancer. Clinical characteristics and variations of established conditions to support the diagnosis of Inflammatory Breast Cancer as measured by the proposed scoring system
Fig. 2Pathologic characteristics for Inflammatory Breast Cancer. Variations of the pathologic presentation of lymphatic emboli, represented in H&E tissue staining, to support the diagnosis of Inflammatory Breast Cancer as measured by the proposed scoring system
Fig. 3Imaging characteristics of Inflammatory Breast Cancer. Variations of the breast imaging to support the diagnosis of Inflammatory Breast Cancer as measured by the proposed scoring system
Example application of the proposed IBC scoring system
| Characteristic | Score | X priority factor | = IBC value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Timing of signs 3–6 months | 2 | 3 | 6 |
| Skin change to peau d`orange | 3 | 3 | 9 |
| Swelling identified by imaging | 1 | 3 | 3 |
| Skin discoloration partial involvement of breast | 2 | 2 | 4 |
| Nipple flattening or other asymmetry | 2 | 2 | 4 |
| Dermal lymphatic emboli present in pathology samples | 3 | 2 | 6 |
| Breast imaging shows diffuse involvement of breast | 3 | 1 | 3 |
| Total score | 35 |
Using the proposed diagnostic criteria and scoring system, a value was determined for a hypothetical patient based on the clinical, pathologic, and imaging characteristics observed, their score values, and the priority factor of each characteristic. The Total IBC Value is represented at the bottom right; a score of 35 would represent strong possibility of IBC