Breast imaging illustration
Common Diagnoses

Breast Cysts

Fluid-filled sacs within breast tissue. Simple cysts are completely benign - the type determines exactly what happens next.

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Quick Take: A breast cyst is a fluid-filled sac within the breast tissue. Simple cysts are completely benign and require no treatment. Complicated cysts need short-interval follow-up. Complex cysts require biopsy. Up to 70–90% of women develop cysts at some point during their lifetime.

The Three Types - At a Glance

Simple Cyst

~0% cancer risk

Completely anechoic (black on ultrasound), thin smooth walls, posterior acoustic enhancement. Definitively benign - no action needed.

BI-RADS 3

Complicated Cyst

<2% cancer risk

Internal echoes (debris, protein, old blood) but no solid component. 6-month follow-up ultrasound to confirm stability.

BI-RADS 4 or 5

Complex Cyst

~23–31% cancer risk

Thick walls, internal septations, mural nodule, or solid component. Biopsy required - though ~70–77% still come back benign.

What Exactly Is a Breast Cyst?

A breast cyst forms when fluid accumulates inside a small sac lined with breast tissue cells. Cysts range from microscopic to several centimeters and are extremely common, particularly in women in their 30s and 40s. They often fluctuate in size and tenderness with the menstrual cycle.

On ultrasound, a simple cyst appears completely anechoic (black - no internal echoes), has thin smooth walls, and shows posterior acoustic enhancement (bright signal behind it). This combination is so reliably benign that no further evaluation is needed.

Additional Cyst Types

Galactocele

A milk-filled cyst occurring in lactating or recently pregnant women. Entirely benign.

Oil Cyst

Contains liquefied fat from fat necrosis after surgery or trauma. BI-RADS 2 - definitively benign on mammography.

Is This Cancer?

A simple cyst has essentially zero cancer risk. A complicated cyst has less than 2% cancer risk. A complex cyst has an elevated cancer risk and requires tissue sampling - however, approximately 70–77% of complex cysts biopsied still come back benign. The biopsy is to confirm, not because cancer is expected.

What Happens Next

Simple cyst (BI-RADS 2)
No follow-up needed

Return to routine annual screening mammography.

Complicated cyst (BI-RADS 3)
6-month ultrasound

Short-interval imaging to confirm the cyst is stable.

Complex cyst (BI-RADS 4/5)
Image-guided biopsy or aspiration with cytology

Ultrasound-guided core needle biopsy or aspiration is recommended.

Newly symptomatic or rapidly growing
Aspiration for diagnosis and relief

Can simultaneously confirm benign content and relieve discomfort.

When Should I Be Concerned?

Seek prompt evaluation if:

Related Topics

Does your report mention "simple cyst," "complicated cyst," or "complex cyst"? The type and BI-RADS category together tell you the level of concern. A board-certified radiologist with subspecialty breast imaging experience can walk you through it step by step.

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This content is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider with any concerns about your breast health.