Large Subpectoral Lipoma on Screening Mammography

Authors

  • Andres Su
  • Laurie Margolies

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3941/jrcr.v11i9.3098

Keywords:

subpectoral lipoma, chest, MRI, mammography, pectoralis major

Abstract

A 61 year-old woman presenting for bilateral screening mammogram was found to have an oval fat-density mass in the posterior right breast, partially visualized, with anterior displacement and thinning of the pectoralis major muscle. This mass was found on CT and MRI correlation to represent a large fat-containing mass, likely a lipoma, deep to the pectoralis major. On subsequent screening mammograms, the visualized portion of the mass remained stable. Subpectoral lipomas and intramuscular lipomas within the pectoralis major are rare, and their appearance on mammography may not be familiar to most radiologists.  A review of the literature and a discussion of their appearance on multiple imaging modalities is provided.

Author Biographies

Andres Su

I am a PGY4 resident physician in the Radiology Department at the Mount Sinai Hospital.

Laurie Margolies

Laurie Margolies, MD FACR is Associate Professor of Radiology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and Director of Breast Imaging at the Dubin Breast Center
at the Mount Sinai Hospital.

Published

2017-09-27

Issue

Section

Breast Imaging