Lobular tumors of the breast are fibroepithelial tumors that can be classified as benign, junctional, or malignant based on their histological features. Etiology The etiology of this disease is still unknown. In addition to race, age and geographical factors, it may also be related to hygiene practices, childbirth and breastfeeding, and endocrine changes. Lobular tumors of the breast may occur initially or may evolve from fibroadenomas, because in a few cases, prior fibroadenomas have been demonstrated in the vicinity of lobular tumors or may even be fibroadenomas in the first place. Clinical features 1. Incidence: lobular tumors are uncommon among breast lumps, accounting for 0.3 to 0.5% of female breast lumps. Age of onset: The majority of lobular tumors are located at the age of 35-55 years, with an average age of 40 years. The average age of diagnosis is 10 years or more older than that of fibroadenoma. Site of onset: About 2/3 of lobular tumors occur in the right breast, most of which are located in the upper outer quadrant. Clinical manifestations: The main manifestation is a painless, single mass that can be palpated, occasionally accompanied by pain, and the average size of the mass is 4-5 cm, with more than 60% of patients >10 cm. Many patients have a continuously growing mass, while others have a stable mass for a long time and a rapidly growing mass within a short period of time. Adolescent women may present with bloody nipple discharge due to spontaneous infarction of the tumor. Large tumors >10 cm may cause skin tightness with superficial varicose veins, but ulcers are rare and nipple retraction is rare. The masses usually do not invade the pectoral muscle and skin and have good mobility. Lobular tumor axillary lymph node metastasis is rare, less than 5%. 5.High frequency ultrasonography of breast: non-invasive and can be used as the first choice. Its ultrasound presentation is a hyperechoic mass with envelope, which may also contain scattered cystic areas. The specific signs of ultrasonography can help in preoperative diagnosis and are important for the selection of treatment plan, but ultrasonography cannot distinguish benign, junctional and malignant lobulated tumors. 6. High frequency mammography: The x-ray performance of lobulated tumors lacks specificity, showing round, round-like or lobulated solid high-density masses with clear edges, smooth, uniform density, increased blood flow, and a few with tiny calcifications. The masses are usually large, and a hypodense halo is seen due to swelling and compression of the surrounding interstitial mammary gland. Smaller masses are indistinguishable from fibroadenomas. Some masses may have poorly defined borders, but there are no signs of malignancy such as disorganization of the surrounding glandular structures, distortion, or thickening of the adjacent skin, and even in lesions located behind the areola, the subcutaneous fat space is still clearly visible and does not cause nipple-areola retraction or invagination. Calcifications within the mass are uncommon and are mostly coarse benign calcifications, and the axillary lymph nodes are usually not significantly enlarged. Currently, most scholars believe that there is no significant relationship between the benignity and malignancy of lobulated breast tumors and the size of the mass, the degree of lobulation and the presence or absence of calcification. In conclusion, if a middle-aged woman presents with a large lobulated mass with clear boundaries and rapid short-term enlargement; if the mass is round or lobulated with high density on X-ray, with halo signs and increased blood corona around it, but without obvious malignant signs, the possibility of lobulated tumor should be considered. 7.MRI: In T1-weighted, the tumor density of lobulated tumor is lower than or equal to normal tissue; while in T2-weighted, the tumor shadow is larger than normal tissue in general. The irregular cyst wall and low diffuse signal correspond to hemorrhagic infarction and necrosis and high proliferation of stromal cells in the tissue, respectively. Some physicians report that the use of contrast-enhanced MRI increases the sensitivity of differentiating between benign and malignant tumors. On the temporal signal profile, a signal enhancement within 1 min is more likely to be a malignant lobulated sarcoma. The value of MRI in the diagnosis of lobulated breast tumors is still to be studied. Pathology: Fine needle aspiration is difficult to distinguish lobulated tumors from fibroadenomas due to the relatively small amount of tissue, and has a high false negative and false positive rate (> 30%), so multi-point needle aspiration combined with immunohistochemistry is recommended. Even so, many clinicians still consider the results of FNA unreliable, with a 50.6% concordance rate with final clinical paraffin results. Although the confirmation rate of frozen pathological examination is higher, reaching 77.8%, which is significantly higher than that of imaging and cytological examination, it is more difficult to distinguish lobulated tumors from fibroadenomas in intraoperative frozen sections, and the malignant lobulated tumor component may be misdiagnosed as undifferentiated carcinoma, which leads to unnecessary overtreatment, so the diagnostic significance of frozen sections is not significant. Hollow-core needle aspiration is the most valuable examination method for preoperative diagnosis of lobulated breast tumors, and more tissues can be obtained by hollow-core needle aspiration. Therefore, for clinical suspicion of lobulated tumors, hollow-core needle aspiration biopsy should be preferred, and surgery should be decided according to the diagnosis, and there is no need to perform resection surgery for frozen pathology examination, which can effectively reduce the chance of reoperation and overtreatment. Diagnosis Preoperative diagnosis is difficult and often misdiagnosed as fibroadenoma, and pathological examination is required to confirm the diagnosis. It is difficult to guess its biological behavior, such as a large lump, or a sudden growth of an existing lump, or recurrence after mastectomy for fibroadenoma, especially if there are multiple recurrences; effective methods for breast cancer diagnosis are also used for lobulated breast tumors, including fine needle aspiration (FNA), hollow needle biopsy (CNB), ultrasound, mammography, and breast MRI. Among them, clinical physical examination, imaging examination and fine needle aspiration cytology examination have no definite significance, while hollow needle aspiration is the most valuable examination method for preoperative diagnosis of lobular breast tumor. Treatment Lobular tumors of the breast are potentially malignant tumors and are treated differently from fibroadenomas. Surgical margins are the best prognostic indicator for local recurrence of lobulated tumors. 1.Surgical treatment: Breast lobular tumor is mainly treated by surgery. There is no correlation between whether the tumor recurs and metastases and the choice of surgical methods such as enlarged lumpectomy or mastectomy to preserve the breast, while the main reason for tumor recurrence is that the cut margin is not negative at the first surgical excision. 1) The tumor is relatively small and can have sufficient cutting edge. Extended resection of the tumor is the preferred surgical approach for lobulated breast tumor, and the scope of surgical resection should include normal breast tissue beyond 1 to 2 cm from the breast tumor; if intraoperative freezing suggests positive cutting edge, it can be resected again. Due to the different treatment methods and clinical prognosis, it is required to make a clear diagnosis before surgery so that appropriate surgical treatment can be carried out, which can effectively avoid incomplete excision or over-treatment. 2) Simple lump excision: If the lump is excised immediately (no margin) or the margin is only a few millimeters, nearly 1/5 will recur, and this proportion is higher in junctional and malignant lobular tumors and lower in benign lobular tumors. If benign lobular tumors are difficult to be resected or deform the breast, the strategy of “wait and see” can be considered. 3)If benign lesions recur after local excision or recur repeatedly, they should be treated as malignant. 4)After recurrence of lobulated tumor, a wide range of re-excision must be performed and sometimes total mastectomy is needed. 2. Other treatments Radiation therapy and systemic therapy have not been proven, but must be considered. Initial treatment of primary lobulated tumors does not require radiotherapy, but adjuvant chest wall radiotherapy should also be performed after secondary surgical resection for patients with local recurrence after lumpectomy or mastectomy, because secondary or tertiary local recurrence of more invasive lesions may be devastating. The efficacy of the use of systemic adjuvant therapy is currently unknown. When systemic adjuvant therapy is used for metastatic lobulated tumors, the principles of treatment for sarcoma should be followed rather than those for breast tumors. Follow-up Breast examination and imaging should be performed twice a year for 5 years after lobectomy and once a year after 5 years. The imaging examination is usually done by ultrasound, which can easily detect the recurrence of tumor in the location of tumor remnants. If the breast gland is dense and rich, and the mass may not be detected by ultrasound, breast MR examination is needed. MR examination should be performed within 1 year after surgery, and if the mass grows faster or is suspected to be malignant, the interval between MR examination and surgery should be shortened even more.