Common Benign Lumps
What are some common types of benign breast lumps?
Noncancer (benign) breast lumps can have many causes. Two of the most common causes
of benign single breast lumps are cysts and fibroadenomas. Several other conditions
can also appear as lumps. These are fat necrosis and sclerosing adenosis. Only your
healthcare provider can diagnose your breast lump.
What is an abscess?
A breast abscess is a pocket of pus that causes swelling and a sore lump in the breast.
Other symptoms include fever and tiredness.
What is a cyst?
A cyst is a fluid-filled sac in the breast tissue. Cysts most often happen in people
between ages 35 and 50. They are common in those nearing menopause, but they can develop
at any age. The cysts often get larger and become sore just before your period. They may
seem to appear overnight. Cysts are rarely cancer (malignant). They may be caused
by blocked breast glands.
Cysts can feel either soft or hard. When close to the surface of the breast, cysts
can feel like a large blister. They aresmooth on the outside, but fluid-filled on
the inside. When they are deep in breast tissue, cysts will feel like hard lumps because
they are covered with tissue.
How are cysts diagnosed and treated?
Your healthcare provider may find a cyst during a physical exam. They may confirm
the diagnosis with a mammogram or ultrasound. You may also have a fine-needle aspiration.
For this, the provider guides a very fine needle into the cyst and draws fluid from
it (aspiration). Aspiration also works as the treatment for this condition. Once the
fluid is removed, the cyst collapses and goes away. But cysts can return. If they
do, they are simply drained again. Cysts are seldom cancer.
What is a fibroadenoma?
Fibroadenomas are solid, smooth, firm, noncancer lumps most often found in people
in their 20s and 30s. They are the most common benign breast lumps in people and can
occur at any age. They are increasingly being seen in postmenopausal people who are
taking hormone therapy.
The painless lump feels rubbery and moves around freely. You may find one yourself.
Fibroadenomas vary in size and can grow anywhere in the breast tissue.
How are fibroadenomas diagnosed and treated?
Your healthcare provider may diagnose this type of lump simply by feeling it. But
they will want to confirm the diagnosis with a mammogram or ultrasound and fine-needle
aspiration. In very young adults, the fibroadenoma sometimes is not removed. But because
these tumors sometimes get larger with pregnancy and breastfeeding, your provider
may suggest having it removed.
Most fibroadenomas don't lead to cancer. But one type of fibroadenoma has been linked
to an increased risk for cancer. This is true in people with a family history of the
disease.
What is fat necrosis?
Fat necrosis is a condition where painless, round, firm lumps caused by damaged and
disintegrating fatty tissues form in the breast tissue. Fat necrosis often occurs
in people with very large breasts. It also occurs in people who have had a bruise
or blow to the breast. This condition may also happen after a lumpectomy and radiation
from an earlier cancer lump. In some cases, healthcare providers will watch the lump
through several menstrual cycles. They may want to do a mammogram before deciding
whether to remove it. These lumps are not cancer and they don't increase your risk
for cancer.
What is galactocele (milk retention cysts)?
These are fluid-filled masses usually caused by a blocked milk duct.
What is a hematoma?
A hematoma is a blood-filled mass caused by injury or a surgical procedure of the
breast.
What is sclerosing adenosis?
Sclerosing adenosis is extra growth of tissues in the breast's lobules. This often
causes breast pain. These changes in the breast tissue are very small, but they may
show up on mammograms as calcifications and can make lumps. Usually a biopsy is needed
to rule out cancer. This condition can also be mistaken for cancer, so the lumps are
usually removed through surgical biopsy.