Onco question

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ericdamiansean

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3 different patients, all with daughters. Whose daughter would you recommend for regular screening/genetic testing etc? And what are their risks?

a) Patient A, 30 year old lady, with right infiltrating ductal carcinoma, treated with mastectomy and axillary clearance, radiochemotherapy, no recurrence for the last 5 years.

b) Patient B, 48 year old lady, with right infiltrating ductal carcinoma, diagnosed early, but progressed rapidly to metastasis to lung, brain and the patient died within 6 years even after aggressive chemo/radio,surg

c) Patient C, 48 year old lady, with right infiltrating ductal carcinoma, underwent mastectomy and axillary clearance, chemotherapy, no recurrence after 5 years
 
I presume these questions are from a class and not real-life examples (because some of the treatment described is not standard).

All women, whether they are daughters/first degree relatives of breast cancer patients or not should be screened. The recommendations are to start regular screening bilateral mammography at age 40, or 10 years earlier than the age of diagnosis of the first degree relative. Many Ob-Gyns will start baseline screening mammography at age 35 although there is no data to support doing this. There is clear evidence that annual mammography reduces the mortality from breast cancer by diagnosing it earlier but the evidence is strongest in women 50-59.

Therefore, ALL the daughters in your example should have routine screening with mammography, preferably digital, 10 years earlier than the age their mother was diagnosed. In addition, they should have clinical breast exams once a year by a health care provider. These recommendations do not change as a function of the outcome of the mother's disease.

The question of genetic testing is more complicated. Any patient with questions regarding the inheritance of a gene mutation should be referred to a genetic counselor for further information. The example(s) provided do not give enough information to ascertain whether or not genetic testing is applicable; there should be information about at least 3 generations in the pedigree. A genetic counselor will construct the pedigree, looking specifically for cases of pre-menopausal breast and ovarian cancer, bilateral breast cancers and multiple cancers in a single person (ie, a relative with breast and ovarian). Using this information, the counselor assesses the patient's risk, using any number of models, and can advise whether or not genetic testing is reasonable (the cost of the exam is approximately $3,000 for full sequencing of the common inherited genes; without a risk analysis and a reasonable positive outcome, it will not be paid for by insurance companies.) The risk analysis should also include the family ethnicity as some founder mutations are more common in certain groups, like Ashkenazi Jews. Some may recommend testing to anyone who is AJ and has a family history but in general, anyone with an assessed risk of carrying one of the BRCA genes over 10% is offered testing. The most important person to test is the person WITH THE DISEASE; obviously this isn't possible when that person is deceased.

With the limited information available, the first case - the 30 year old - would be statistically more likely to have a mutation based on age alone, as these tend to produce earlier cancers. However, the vast majority of pre-menopausal women diagnosed with breast cancer do not have a germline mutation. The others are likely to be premenopausal, but we don't know enough to say whether that is the case.

As an aside, the role of radiation treatment is well established in women choosing breast conservation and those who have chest wall invasion. I am unclear as to why your first example had an MRM plus radiation and chemo. Radiation is not standard post-mastectomy unless she had chest wall invasion and its fairly uncommon to do an MRM today as most women are node negative (although younger women can present with more advanced disease as they haven't started screening and do not have regular exams, so tend to be diagnosed later). Most women can have breast conservation in the form of either a primary partial mastectomy with axillary staging via a sentinel node procedure or after tumor cytoreduction using neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. It is recommended that a marking clip be placed by the surgeon during biopsy in a patient who is having neo-adjuvant in an effort to keep her breast; the tumor response can be so great as to leave no palpable or radiographic evidence once therapy is completed. Thus, your examples are a bit "old-school" or do not represent the typical patient, at least those treated at centers which practice gold standards of care; the role of modified radical mastectomy has "radically" decreased in the last 10-15 years and is generally only appropriate in certain cases (which may or may not be reflected in the "back story" of your patients).

Ok....getting off my soap box.

Thus, in your examples, all daughters need to have routine screening and some may be counseled that they have a higher risk of harboring a mutation (depending on other information not provided) and be offered genetic testing. All women with a first degree relative who has pre-menopausal breast cancer are at increased risk, but depending on the model you use, the risk varies depending on their own life: age of menses, age of birth of first child, number of biopsies, biopsy with increased risk (ie, atypical hyperplasia), etc. Therefore, just having a mother with breast cancer is not a reason to have genetic screening nor is it a reason to increase your own screening past earlier mammography and routine clinical breast exam. The use of MRI is approved for those with genetic mutations but not for someone with an average risk of disease. Finally, I think health care providers need not to fall into the same trap as the general public does and assume that all breast cancer gets the same treatment. Treatment is based on tumor biology and "your mother's cancer is not YOUR cancer". That is, it really doens't make any difference to me if the first degree relative had infiltrating ductal vs lobular vs inflammatory cancer, whether or not she had mets or got chemo and rads, in counseling the daughter. The daughter will get the same recommendations (unless she is in a higher risk category because of having a mutation or a biopsy with atypia) for screening regardless of the type of cancer her mother had and if she too were to develop breast cancer her treated would be individualized. Patients come in every day and tell me about their "neighbor" or their "cousin" who had breast cancer and they assume their treatment will be the same. Receptors are different, treatment meds change and one woman might need an ax dissection and another not. So don't make the mistake of assuming the examples actual diagnosis and outcome makes a difference in the daughter's treatment.

I am not sure about your query "what are their risks?" If you are asking about the risk of developing breast cancer, I can only say that as females with a first degree relative their risk is increased. Most women have a 9% risk of developing breast cancer in their lifetimes if they live to the age of 90. Without more information about these daughters (ie, as noted above, age of menses, age of first childbirth, any genetic mutation, number of biopsies, number of biopsies with atypia, etc.) I cannot accurately assess their risk...except to say that it is likely increased although "increased" does not = high risk, nor does it imply need for increased surveillance.

Hope that helps...gotta go...giving the breast talk to the 3rd year medical students today! 😉
 
I presume these questions are from a class and not real-life examples (because some of the treatment described is not standard).

Yup, that helped! Thanks for the thorough answer.
These are actually real life cases which I have seen, I can't remember the complete staging, treatment etc.

Just something silly which someone asked in class today. Any opinion on this would do..an ethical issue

We discussed a case of a lady who passed away at the age of 52 due to aggressive breast cancer, from time of diagnosis to death was about 6 years. She has 2 daughters who are in their 20s now. Is it right for someone to anonymously alert the daughters to start early screening even at the age of 25 via anonymous email etc? I know the question sounds kinda silly but secondary prevention right?
 
Yup, that helped! Thanks for the thorough answer.
These are actually real life cases which I have seen, I can't remember the complete staging, treatment etc.

Just something silly which someone asked in class today. Any opinion on this would do..an ethical issue

We discussed a case of a lady who passed away at the age of 52 due to aggressive breast cancer, from time of diagnosis to death was about 6 years. She has 2 daughters who are in their 20s now. Is it right for someone to anonymously alert the daughters to start early screening even at the age of 25 via anonymous email etc? I know the question sounds kinda silly but secondary prevention right?

Well, I presume the daughters are aware of their mother's diagnosis and demise?

Regardless of ethics, I don't see the point. There is no evidence that:

a) screening with mammography more than 10 years prior to the age of diagnosis of the mother affects the daughter's mortality from breast cancer; heck, there isn't even any evidence that 10 years earlier is the right answer; some would say 5 years earlier

b) screening with mammography at age 25 would not reduce their risk of developing breast cancer and wouldn't necessarily diagnose it earlier; mammography misses up to 10% of breast cancers in all women, the rate is even higher with younger women with denser breasts. If a 25 year old walks into the office with a palpable mass, she isn't sent for mammography but rather an ultrasound.

The daughters should get their baseline mammography at age 38 and have yearly clinical breast exams. Their mother's diagnosis only affects the age at which they should start screening. There is no role to screen earlier and it probably only exists to increase the patient's anxiety. While tests are done to palliate patient anxiety, its not good medicine - its better to show the patient the literature which doesn't support earlier screening (assuming the patient wasn't BRCA positive).

As for notifying the daughters in an anonymous email, what's the point? The daughters are adults, they presumably know their mother's diagnosis and have made their own choices about screening. You cannot legislate whether or not people take care of themselves or follow medical advice. You cannot require the daughters to see their own Ob-Gyn or family physician who should order their baseline mammograms at age 38.

I guess I'm confused about what your classmate(s) think they are accomplishing by telling the daughters what to do and why they would recommend any earlier screening than what the guidelines will pay for (insurance will not pay for screening done outside the guidelines...not that that is a reason to avoid ordering tests, but I really don't see the benefit here).
 
Well, I presume the daughters are aware of their mother's diagnosis and demise?

Highly likely:laugh:

I guess I'm confused about what your classmate(s) think they are accomplishing by telling the daughters what to do and why they would recommend any earlier screening than what the guidelines will pay for (insurance will not pay for screening done outside the guidelines...not that that is a reason to avoid ordering tests, but I really don't see the benefit here).

That guy who asked has the hots for one of the daughters..thought that he would do something nice for her that would make her fall in love with him😆

Yup, most insurance companies here don't pay for screening, but some are starting to. Those that don't, do offer insurance for reconstructive surgery/skin grafting etc
 
Highly likely:laugh:



That guy who asked has the hots for one of the daughters..thought that he would do something nice for her that would make her fall in love with him😆

Yup, most insurance companies here don't pay for screening, but some are starting to. Those that don't, do offer insurance for reconstructive surgery/skin grafting etc

Now that I have the "back story" on your environment and the patients, everything is making more sense to me.

Working in an environment where there is a lack of information and knowledge about breast disease makes things more difficult. The daughters may harbor some of the same misconceptions about breast cancer that the general public in Malaysia does and therefore not bother with screening, presuming that if the fates align and they get breast cancer, disfigurement and death are a foregone conclusion.

Its a shame that insurance companies don't pay for screening because the cost of lives saved, for women 50-59 and older, via early diagnosis with mammography, much exceeds the cost of the imaging study. The evidence is not so strong for younger women (ages 40-49) and caused some controversy in the states when it came time to make recommendations for screening mammography. Although the cost per year of life saved was more in the younger population, it was felt that overall it was worth it to recommend starting screening at 40. Insurance companies finally came around and realized that if they prevent disease or enable a disease to be diagnosed earlier (remember mammography doesn't PREVENT breast cancer...as some laypeople seem to think) it saves them money. Insurance companies like saving money. In the states it is illegal to deny coverage to anyone seeking reconstructive surgery for cancer or for a women seeking contralateral surgery for symmetry with the affected breast.

Fortunately, I don't have to deal with skin grafting chest wall defects often (only once) but with huge fungating tumors which comprise the entire chest, its hard to close without some sort of graft or Alloderm.

The bigger fight is for public funding for those without insurance...low cost or free mammograms for the indigent. Its all well and good if insurance pays for it, but what if you don't have insurance, access to health care or knowledge about how to access it.

Anyway, good luck to your classmate with the hots for the daughter...but perhaps he should think of another way to get her to fall in love with him rather than violating any medical privacy laws (and get accused of stalking..or maybe that only occurs here)!
 
ericdamiansean said:
That guy who asked has the hots for one of the daughters..thought that he would do something nice for her that would make her fall in love with him😆

Maybe he could give her a clinical breast exam and she might fall in love with his strong hands!😉



On a serious note, Kimberli Cox,
I am confused why the daughters should get baseline mammograms at 38? If the guidelines state 10 yrs younger than the index case wouldn't that make 36? (i.e. mom diagnosed at 46 and died at 52). I'm not trying to be picky, just wondering if I'm missing something obvious...

On my surgery rotation the attendings and residents constantly espoused the idea that "for all that we've accomplished with chemo, surgery, and screening mammograms...we have not improved mortality in breast CA." But when reading the textbooks, it appears that the 5yr prognosis is improving especially when detected earlier. Also, hasn't the use of SERMs increased survival stage for stage in ER/PR+ cancer? Likewise for aromatase inhibitors? And HER2-neu?

Also, it is believed that OCPs do not appear to increase the risk of breast cancer. The WHI, on the other hand, showed that combined estrogen and progesterone increased the risk of breast cancer. Is the carcinogenic effect of E+P strictly a post menopausal phenomenon?

What would be your approach to the following:
56 yo woman presents to LMD for clinical breast exam. No breast mass is found, but 2-3 axillary nodes are palpable.
- Would a mammogram be the "next best step in diagnosis?"

Obviously we are gonna have to harvest some lymph nodes, so say they came back positive for cancer...
- You have to assume she has systemic disease and needs chemo, correct? Will she need radiation?
- Next we have to figure out ER/PR, HER2-neu status to base our chemo?
- Would we need a CXR for occult mets? CT of head, chest, abdomen, and pelvis? Bone scan only if symptomatic?

This has been a confusing topic for me throughout the year and you appear to know your $hit so your input on this would be greatly appreciated.
 
On a serious note, Kimberli Cox,
I am confused why the daughters should get baseline mammograms at 38? If the guidelines state 10 yrs younger than the index case wouldn't that make 36? (i.e. mom diagnosed at 46 and died at 52). I'm not trying to be picky, just wondering if I'm missing something obvious...

You're not confused, my math skills are bad! :laugh:

Yes, the daughters should start screening at age 36, or ten years before the mother was diagnosed.

I'll answer your other questions later (as its time to get the hospital) as they will take some time to answer...glad after all the training and taking a job as a breast surgical oncologist, I appear to know my &^*%!:laugh:
 
Sorry took so long...my cable was out yesterday.

On my surgery rotation the attendings and residents constantly espoused the idea that "for all that we've accomplished with chemo, surgery, and screening mammograms...we have not improved mortality in breast CA."

To put it bluntly, your attendings and residents are wrong. We HAVE improved mortality over all in breast cancer. Using the National Cancer Institute's SEER database (Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results) the survival rates over the last twenty five years have improved for all age groups in patients with locoregional disease, and the age-adjusted breast cancer mortality rate for all white women has decreased. The decreases are most steady since the early 90s. Every other important study looking at the issue of mortality agrees with the NCI data; we have decreased mortality in all age groups, across all races, for locoregional disease.

The issue becomes more clouded when you look at race; while the death rate has declined somewhat for African Americans, it has not done so nearly as much as it has for whites. Some of this is due to the later stage at which AAs are often diagnosed; despite the widespread use of screening mammography, AAs are still disproportionately diagnosed later (by way of comparison, 20 years ago only 35% of white women were diagnosed in Stage 1; now it approaches 60% almost all of which is likely to be due to the increased use of mammography and awareness). We also have not been as successful in decreasing mortality rates for patients with advanced disease; while inroads have been made, the vast majority of decreases in overall mortality are because of earlier diagnoses. Unfortunately, some patients have tumor biologies which are less favorable under current treatment plans and patients diagnosed with Stage 4 disease are still likely to die of their disease.

But when reading the textbooks, it appears that the 5yr prognosis is improving especially when detected earlier.

That is correct, although for African American women, the 5 year survival rates are lower than for white women - across the board: local disease, locoregional and metastatic breast cancer. Prognosis and survival dramatically increase with earlier stages of diagnoses.

Also, hasn't the use of SERMs increased survival stage for stage in ER/PR+ cancer? Likewise for aromatase inhibitors? And HER2-neu?

The increase in survival rates, particularly for women with locoregional disease reflects not only earlier diagnosis with screening mammography but also improvements in systemic adjuvant therapy via the use of multidrug combinations and better targeted agents. Results from the Early Breast Trialists Group note that multidrug chemotherapy (which I know you weren't talking about above, but figured I'd mention it) significantly reduces recurrence and mortality in node negative and positive patients regardless of age, stage or receptor status. It is important to note that the best evidence for the use of SERMS and/or AIs is not only to reduce mortality from breast cancer but also for risk reduciton - they reduce recurrence, increase time to recurrence and incidence of contralateral breast cancer. So they increase disease free survival rate by reducing the risk of recurrence by about 45% and the risk of death by 25% (mostly Tamoxifen data).

Herceptin, being used in a different population of patients, works best when used with chemotherapy. A number of small trials have shown a complete pathological response using herceptin as neoadjuvant treatment in 20-35% of patients. Much better numbers than using paclitaxel and FEC (which isn't widely used anymore).

Also, it is believed that OCPs do not appear to increase the risk of breast cancer. The WHI, on the other hand, showed that combined estrogen and progesterone increased the risk of breast cancer. Is the carcinogenic effect of E+P strictly a post menopausal phenomenon?

Despite early fears that OCPs increased the risk of breast cancer, the confounding factors that women who delayed childbirth are more likely to get breast cancer and women who have regular medical care are more likely to have breast cancer diagnosed (at least earlier), confused the issue. It does not appear that OCPs increase breast cancer, as you note.

The follow-up for women who partipated in the WHI study of hormone replacement is expected to continue until the end of 2007. While the study did show 8 more women in the estrogen-prog group developed invasive breast cancer than the placebo group, this was not significant and there was no observed increase in mortality in that group. There are some other problems with the WHI study - the women were, on average, 10 years older than the average menopausal woman - and a major one: the study was only 5 years in length which given the average time from initial growth to detectable tumor is 5 years...so these women were likely to have had their breast cancers when they enrolled in the study, regardless of which arm they were in; the drop out rate and the rate at which women started and stopped the meds were higher than predicated pre-enrollment. There's just too much wrong with the WHI data to form a definitive conclusion about the role of HRT in breast cancer. So I remain unconvinced that HRT increases the rate of breast cancer or that it has any effect on mortality. Just the same, I would advise any women with an ER/PR + tumor on HRT to stop the hormones.

What would be your approach to the following:
56 yo woman presents to LMD for clinical breast exam. No breast mass is found, but 2-3 axillary nodes are palpable.
- Would a mammogram be the "next best step in diagnosis?"

Yes. You must always have the basics before you embark on a treatment journey. Any woman with a suspcious mass (axillary or not) needs appropriate diagnostic imaging - in this case a bilateral diagnostic mammogram to start.

Obviously we are gonna have to harvest some lymph nodes, so say they came back positive for cancer...
- You have to assume she has systemic disease and needs chemo, correct? Will she need radiation?

I would probably FNA the nodes in the office if they are fairly shallow and reachable at the end of my needle, while awaiting the mammo and operating room time. Ax dissection is the standard of care for axillary nodes which are positive on FNA for breast mets and/or palpable. Of course there are cases of axillary lymphadenopathy being a CUPs but we will assume in your case that they are related to a breast cancer (the tricky question comes when you can't find a mass on mammo or MRI but you have positive nodes which appear to come from breast primary.)
A node positive patient requires adjuvant therapy with a combination chemotherapeutic regime. Most radiation oncologists would radiate patients with more than 4 positive nodes in the axilla (found on Ax Dissection) or fixed, matted nodes (N2 disease). (Obviously I am leaving out of the discussion post-operative radiation of the breast for local control).

So to answer your question, if she has positive nodes, she by definition has metastatic disease and cannot be cured of her disease. But she doesn't have to die of her disease and you must treat her as you see fit...with the data we have above, a young-ish patient with no other evidence of disease, so I would venture that all medical oncologists would be offering her systemic treatment.

- Next we have to figure out ER/PR, HER2-neu status to base our chemo?

Yes. The medical oncologist will not design a treatment protocol without tissue (ie, "no meat, no treat"). So I must provide them with enough tissue (usually via core biopsy, partial mastectomy or axillary dissection in this case to run receptor status on.

-Would we need a CXR for occult mets? CT of head, chest, abdomen, and pelvis? Bone scan only if symptomatic?

The standard, at least at our facility, is to order a CT of the chest abdomen and pelvis and total body bone scan. Brain mets are rarely occult so CT head without symptoms is low yield. We will have our CXR from pre-op testing from the axillary clearance. Some places add a whole body PET instead of bone scan and others may include bilateral breast MRI - a good idea if you cannot find a primary on mammo.

Of note, you may be interested to know that there is no data to suggest that routine post-treatment follow-up with markers or the above imaging tests change mortality. So, we do not routinely order regular ct scans or bone scans unless the patient is symptomatic. Patients on a SERM do get regular gyn exams (although the Gyns tend to go overboard and order regular TV ultrasounds and then biopsy when they see endometrial thickening...which is almost never endometrial CA) and bone density every couple of years. Patients on Doxorubicin get frequent MUGA scans every few months while on treatment, or when symptomatic.

This has been a confusing topic for me throughout the year and you appear to know your $hit so your input on this would be greatly appreciated.

You are not the only one. The topic changes rapidly and even attendings can get confused (I had one of my former attendings this year and a former co-resident both call me for "mini lectures" on breast right before their board recerts and initial board cert exams. Its hard to keep up to date). Hope this helps.
 
👍 Awesome, very helpful and very informative.

One more thing, I was reading an article in the Lancet (2/17/07) entitled "Switching to aromatase inhibitors in early breast cancer" where in the usual cryptic statician vernaculum they reported "improved recurrence-free survival but no overall survival benefit" in patients who switch to aromatase inhibitors ~2yrs into treatment....

😕what dat mean?

Is this related to long term complications secondary to treatment? Is this b/c the cancer comes back more aggressive when it finally returns?

I guess I don't understand how you could have one (recurrence free survival) without the other (overall survival benefit). This is gonna be a big deal in the next couple of years when these big studies (aromatase vs. serms vs. switching) start releasing their findings and It'd be nice to have a baseline understanding...



Thanks in advance,
BND
 
👍 Awesome, very helpful and very informative.

Glad to be of help.

One more thing, I was reading an article in the Lancet (2/17/07) entitled "Switching to aromatase inhibitors in early breast cancer" where in the usual cryptic statician vernaculum they reported "improved recurrence-free survival but no overall survival benefit" in patients who switch to aromatase inhibitors ~2yrs into treatment....

😕what dat mean?

:laugh:

What dat means is that patients switched to AIs lived longer before any recurrence developed but that they do not live longer overall when compared to those on SERMS. In other words, it takes longer before a recurrence develops in those who switched to AIs from SERMS after 2 years than in those who stayed on the SERMS for 5 year, but that in the end, the length of time both groups survived from time of diagnoses (overall survival) was the same.

Is this related to long term complications secondary to treatment? Is this b/c the cancer comes back more aggressive when it finally returns?

It is not believed that there is any difference in survival related to secondary effects from treatment. The tumor isn't necessarily more aggressive when it returns (if it returns) although in some sub-groups, there is a development of "burnt out" receptors which can result in a recurrence of receptor negative (or even triple negative) disease which has fewer options for treatment. Remember once someone has been radiated, they cannot be reradiated and if a cancer recurs after treatment with a certain chemotherapeutic regimin, it wouldn't be wise to use that again. Therefore, a recurrence necessarily has fewer treatment options and yes, in some cases, the tumor is more aggressive.

I guess I don't understand how you could have one (recurrence free survival) without the other (overall survival benefit). This is gonna be a big deal in the next couple of years when these big studies (aromatase vs. serms vs. switching) start releasing their findings and It'd be nice to have a baseline understanding...

But you already do understand this.

Recall that in comparing partial mastectomy with radiation against mastectomy, one has an improved recurrence free survival but that there is no overall survival benefit. That is, a woman choosing to have a mastectomy over a partial with radiation has less chance of recurrence (buts it not 0), a longer period of time to recurrence but has no survival advantage over the women who chose to have a partial mastectomy. The local surgical treatment does nothing for survival it only affects localregional recurrence. That is, if you have invasive breast cancer and you have tumor cells in your big toe, removing the breast or not does nothing to those cells in the big toe (or bloodstream, bones, liver, etc.) The choice of surgery only affects local decisions. The radiation only provides localregional control. Only systemic therapy, in the form of chemo or hormonal blockade, provides treatment for cells that have "escaped" the breast.

And the difference also lies in the tumor biology and what is defined as a recurrence. For the latter, is it tumor in the same surgical bed, the same quadrant or the same breast? Did all of the patients have negative surgical margins and if so, how was that defined (a controversy, actually)? Did all the patients treated with RT actually complete their course? What was the nodal status and tumor biology of the original tumor? And finally, is the "recurrence" invasive or in situ disease, what is the receptor status and hwo was it treated? All of that will impact on overall survival. Not all recurrences are equal.

Hope that helps.
 
😍 I love you... <moves in for a kiss but smacks his head on the computer screen>

:laugh: Seriously though, that was a huge help.

Now will you come and take my surgery board for me in in 5.5 hrs????
 
😍 I love you... <moves in for a kiss but smacks his head on the computer screen>

:laugh: Seriously though, that was a huge help.

Now will you come and take my surgery board for me in in 5.5 hrs????

I always wanted my body to be taken over by the specialist of the field during my exams:laugh:
 
😍 I love you... <moves in for a kiss but smacks his head on the computer screen>

:laugh: Seriously though, that was a huge help.

Now will you come and take my surgery board for me in in 5.5 hrs????

Glad to be of help. I'm sure you'll do well, and in general on the NBME Surgery Shelf there are 4-6 breast questions each year, so only a small percentage of the total.

I'd LOVE to take the Surgery shelf exam over the ACS Surgery Boards anyday, if I only had that option! 😀
 
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