What Exactly Is a Spiculated Mass?
A spiculated mass has a radiating, star-like margin — thin linear projections (spicules) extend from the central body of the mass into the surrounding breast tissue. This appearance results from the way some breast cancers grow: rather than pushing cleanly outward (like a benign fibroadenoma), they actively infiltrate surrounding tissue, pulling fibrous strands inward — called a desmoplastic reaction.
On mammography, a spiculated mass appears as a dense star-shaped lesion. On ultrasound, it appears as an irregular, hypoechoic mass with spiculated margins, usually taller than it is wide, often with posterior acoustic shadowing.
What the Radiologist Evaluates
When a spiculated mass is identified, the radiologist documents: size and location; associated findings (calcifications, skin thickening, nipple retraction, axillary lymph node abnormality); comparison with prior imaging; and axillary lymph node status — abnormal nodes indicate possible nodal spread.
Types and Benign Mimics
Invasive Ductal Carcinoma (IDC)
Most common type — approximately 75–80% of invasive breast cancers. Frequently presents as a spiculated mass.
Tubular Carcinoma
IDC subtype with very favorable prognosis. Classically presents as a small (less than 1 cm) spiculated mass.
Invasive Lobular Carcinoma (ILC)
Less commonly presents as a spiculated mass — more often as architectural distortion. Biopsy still required.
Fat Necrosis (at prior procedure site)
Can form a spiculated mass identical in appearance to cancer at a prior biopsy or lumpectomy site. Biopsy still required to confirm.
Radial Scar
Creates a spiculated pattern without a true mass. Biopsy needed to differentiate from cancer — cannot be distinguished on imaging alone.
What Happens Next
Ultrasound-guided core needle biopsy if visible on ultrasound, or stereotactic/MRI-guided biopsy if ultrasound-negative.
Breast MRI often performed to assess extent of disease. Surgical consultation, medical oncology referral, and genetic counseling for appropriate patients initiated.
A benign biopsy result cannot be accepted for a BI-RADS 5 finding. The imaging probability overrides a discordant benign result.
Staging scans if clinically indicated.
Urgent Actions
Do not delay — act within days:
- Biopsy should be arranged urgently, within days to a week
- Ask your provider about timeline — this requires prompt scheduling
- Gather prior mammograms — comparison imaging is reviewed before biopsy
- Seek a breast center or breast surgical oncologist — multidisciplinary management leads to better outcomes
Related Topics
Does your report mention a spiculated mass or BI-RADS 5? This is one of the most concerning findings in breast imaging. A board-certified radiologist with subspecialty breast imaging experience can walk you through exactly what it means and what your next steps should be.
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