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Common Diagnoses

Fat Necrosis

A benign condition where damaged breast fat forms a scar-like change - but it can closely mimic cancer on imaging.

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Quick Take: Fat necrosis is a benign condition where fatty tissue in the breast is damaged - from surgery, trauma, or radiation - and forms a scar-like or cyst-like change. It is not cancer, but it can look like cancer on imaging. Biopsy is sometimes needed to confirm the benign diagnosis.

Fat necrosis is not cancer. It is entirely benign. Because its imaging appearance can closely mimic breast cancer, biopsy is sometimes required - not because cancer is expected, but to confirm with certainty that the finding is benign.

What Exactly Is Fat Necrosis?

Fat necrosis occurs when fat cells in the breast lose their blood supply, die, and are replaced by scar tissue, fluid, or calcium deposits. It is most commonly seen after lumpectomy and radiation therapy, core needle biopsy, blunt trauma (seatbelt injury, sports impact), breast reduction or reconstruction, or occasionally spontaneously.

The challenge is that fat necrosis spans a wide imaging spectrum - from obviously benign (a classic oil cyst) to frankly suspicious (a spiculated mass that can appear identical to invasive cancer).

Always provide your complete surgical history to your imaging facility. Knowing about prior lumpectomy, biopsy, trauma, or reconstruction is the most important tool for correctly interpreting these findings and avoiding unnecessary procedures.

Reassuring vs. Concerning Features

✓ Reassuring Features

  • Location directly at or near a known lumpectomy site or biopsy scar
  • Classic oil cyst appearance - round lucent lesion on mammogram
  • "Eggshell" or rim calcifications
  • MRI signal that follows fat on all sequences

⚠ Concerning Features

  • Spiculated margins identical to invasive cancer
  • Irregular enhancement on MRI
  • New or enlarging finding not explained by a prior procedure
  • Fine, pleomorphic calcifications

Types of Fat Necrosis on Imaging

Oil Cyst

Round or oval lucent mass on mammogram, often with eggshell calcification. BI-RADS 2 - definitively benign. No biopsy needed. Classic post-traumatic or post-surgical appearance.

Dystrophic Calcifications

Coarse, irregular calcium deposits in scar tissue. Classic post-lumpectomy/radiation feature. BI-RADS 2 when the pattern is recognized.

Spiculated Mass

Dense fibrous scar tissue with radiating lines. Can be indistinguishable from cancer on imaging. Biopsy frequently required even when prior surgery is known.

Solid Mass with Irregular Margins

Fibrotic fat necrosis forming a solid-feeling lump. May also require biopsy to confirm benign diagnosis.

What Happens Next

Classic oil cyst or dystrophic calcifications
BI-RADS 2 - No biopsy needed

Return to routine annual surveillance mammography.

Probably benign but evolving appearance
BI-RADS 3 - 6-month short-interval follow-up

Imaging repeated to confirm stability.

Ambiguous or spiculated appearance
BI-RADS 4 - Image-guided core needle biopsy

Biopsy is needed to confirm the benign diagnosis.

Confirmed fat necrosis, stable
Annual surveillance mammography

Return to routine screening.

When Should I Be Concerned?

Seek prompt evaluation if:

Related Topics

Does your report mention fat necrosis, an oil cyst, or post-surgical changes? This describes a benign scar-related process - but the imaging appearance determines whether biopsy is needed. 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.