Breast Masses and Other Breast Complaints During Lactation
CQ #138 – April 1, 2019
by Anne Eglash MD, IBCLC, FABM
#LACTFACT
The majority of breast masses during lactation warrant diagnostic imaging. The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine’s Protocol #30 covers diagnostic and treatment considerations for a comprehensive list of masses and other breast concerns during lactation.
Breastfeeding Med 2019 14(4)
What are appropriate means to evaluate breast masses and other breast concerns during lactation?
Some breast masses are specific to lactation, such as abscesses. Other masses, like fibroadenomas, might appear or grow during lactation but are not necessarily lactation specific. Breastfeeding women may develop other breast symptoms such as nipple growths, skin changes, or nipple bleeding, and it can be challenging to determine if these changes are lactation-related.
The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine’s protocol on breast masses and other breast complaints defines and describes various breast masses, nipple lesions, and reasons for breast pain and nipple bleeding. It also recommends diagnostic and treatment options for the most common breast masses diagnosed during lactation.
Find out what you know about breast masses and other breast complaints during lactation. Choose 1 or more:
- Core biopsies are preferred over fine needle biopsies for masses during lactation that require further workup.
- A milk fistula is a relatively common risk of a core biopsy.
- A breast MRI is more sensitive (easier to see abnormalities) during lactation than a mammogram.
- The ‘rusty pipe syndrome’ is a self-limited duration of bleeding (brown or bright red blood) from the nipples that should, by definition, resolve within the first 2 weeks of lactation.
- Paget’s disease of the breast often presents as an eczema-like lesion on the nipple.
- Lactating adenomas should be removed.
- Galactoceles are milk retention cysts that should never be aspirated.
- Lactiferous sinuses are present behind the areola.
Barbara Robertson
Hello! Love these. I thought we decided there were no lactiferous sinuses. Once Donna Ramsey did her ultrasounds we didn’t see them as Cooper did when he did his work with cadavers and injecting hot wax. I was surprised H was true. Please tell me more.
Anne Eglash
This article was coauthored by 2 breast surgeons. They identify lactiferous sinuses in the retroareolar region when they operate so they truly exist! Ramsey’s imaging studies didn’t find them, but we know that imaging results are not as reliable as surgical findings.
Barbara Robertson
Dear Anne,
Thank you! It is interesting that this is the area where babies tend to latch and (from Maya Bolman) I help families with hand expression. So we are back to believing???
Thank you!
Barbara
Anne Eglash
Yes, I am now a believer.
Susan
Very interesting and helpful information. I thought the word”sinuses” was outdated and not longer used-replaced by “ducts”. Could you please clarify the terminology? Thank you
Barbara Hardin
Hi Anne,
Thank you for this post and for the IABLE Lactfact postings. They are always useful. Is there a date set for when this Protocol #30 will be available on the ABM website?
Anne Eglash
It should be published soon, within the next few weeks, on the website for free access at bfmed.org.