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Triple Assessment of Breast Lumps — MRCS Revision

🔬 Triple Assessment of Breast Lumps

Clinical examination, imaging (mammography + ultrasound), pathological assessment — BIRADS, FNAC, core biopsy, wire-guided biopsy — MRCS high-yield.

Triple Assessment — Overview

All breast lumps in adults must be investigated with triple assessment — the combination of three independent diagnostic tools. This is the internationally agreed standard of care.

The Core Principle — Concordance = Safety

When all three components are concordant with benign disease, this has a ~99% negative predictive value for malignancy. If any component suggests malignancy or is discordant with the others, the result is treated as malignant until proven otherwise.

Discordance = malignancy assumed. Never accept a benign label from one modality alone.

1
Clinical Assessment
  • Thorough breast history
  • Full breast examination — inspection + palpation
  • Axillary and supraclavicular lymph node assessment
  • Skin changes — dimpling, peau d’orange, ulceration
  • Nipple changes — retraction, discharge, eczema
2
Radiological Assessment
  • Mammography — gold standard screening; ≥35 years
  • Ultrasound — first line <35 years, pregnant, breastfeeding
  • Both modalities may be combined in selected cases
  • MRI breast for specific indications (BRCA surveillance, implants)
3
Pathological Assessment
  • FNAC — cytology; quick; outpatient; best for cysts
  • Core biopsy — tissue diagnosis; distinguishes DCIS from IDC; hormone receptor status
  • Wire-guided excisional biopsy — when core biopsy non-diagnostic
Who Gets What Imaging?
Patient GroupFirst-Line ImagingRationale
Age ≥35 yearsMammography (± USS)Less dense breast tissue post-35 — mammography more sensitive; gold standard for microcalcifications and spiculated masses
Age <35 yearsUltrasound firstDense glandular tissue reduces mammographic sensitivity — glandular tissue and carcinoma both appear white on X-ray, obscuring lesions. USS unaffected by tissue density.
PregnantUltrasound firstAvoid radiation; dense oedematous pregnancy breast reduces mammographic utility
BreastfeedingUltrasound firstLactating breast is dense and engorged; USS preferred; no radiation
Male breast lumpUltrasound ± mammographyUSS first-line; mammogram if USS suspicious for malignancy (gynaec vs carcinoma)
NHS BSP screen-detectedMammography done; add USS or biopsyScreening programme: 2-view mammography every 3 years, ages 50–70

One-Stop Breast Clinic

Most NHS trusts deliver all three components of triple assessment in a single outpatient visit. The patient has clinical examination, imaging, and pathological sampling on the same day, with results discussed at the end of the appointment or at a short-notice follow-up. This allows immediate concordance assessment and avoids delays from prolonged multi-appointment work-ups.

Typical flow: GP 2WW referral → arrive at clinic → history + examination → imaging suite (USS ± mammography) → if lesion found → immediate USS-guided core or FNAC → MDT discussion → result within the visit or within days.

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