Breast imaging illustration
Suspicious Findings

Irregular Mass

A solid lesion with an uneven, non-geometric shape — suspicious for malignancy when combined with non-circumscribed margins. Biopsy is required.

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Quick Take: An irregular mass with non-circumscribed margins is suspicious for malignancy and is assigned BI-RADS 4 or 5 depending on specific features. Biopsy is required. The exact BI-RADS subcategory (4A, 4B, or 4C) reflects the probability of malignancy and helps your team understand urgency.

What Exactly Is an Irregular Mass?

When radiologists describe a mass as "irregular," they mean its shape does not conform to a simple geometric form (round, oval). Instead, it has uneven contours, angular projections, or unpredictable changes in direction at its edges. This irregularity reflects the disorganized, infiltrating growth pattern of many breast cancers.

An irregular mass is always evaluated alongside its margin description — the two together determine the BI-RADS category. An irregular mass with circumscribed margins is somewhat less concerning; an irregular mass with indistinct margins is moderately suspicious; an irregular mass with spiculated margins is highly suspicious (BI-RADS 5).

BI-RADS Subcategories

BI-RADS 4A

2–10%

Irregular shape, partially circumscribed margins. Low to moderate suspicion. Biopsy typically recommended.

BI-RADS 4B

10–50%

Irregular shape, indistinct or microlobulated margins. A genuine diagnostic coin toss — most cases are biopsied.

BI-RADS 4C

50–95%

Irregular shape, non-circumscribed margins, high density. High suspicion — behaves clinically like BI-RADS 5.

BI-RADS 5

>95%

Irregular shape + spiculated margins — the most concerning combination. Urgent biopsy required. See the Spiculated Mass page for full details.

Types and Causes

Invasive Ductal Carcinoma (IDC)

Most common breast cancer. Frequently presents as an irregular mass with indistinct or spiculated margins.

Invasive Lobular Carcinoma (ILC)

Can present as an irregular mass. More commonly creates architectural distortion or asymmetry.

Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

Often presents as a rapidly growing irregular mass — may paradoxically have circumscribed margins despite being biologically aggressive. Can be deceptively benign-looking on imaging.

Abscess / Mastitis

In a lactating or recently postpartum woman. Clinical context (fever, pain, redness) and response to antibiotics guides management.

Complex Fibroadenoma

Occasionally presents as an irregular mass. Biopsy needed to distinguish from malignancy.

What Happens Next

BI-RADS 4 (any subcategory)
Image-guided core needle biopsy

Ultrasound-guided biopsy preferred if visible on ultrasound, or stereotactic biopsy if needed.

BI-RADS 5
Urgent biopsy and staging evaluation

No delay — proceed as for highly suspicious finding.

Benign biopsy, concordant
Return to surveillance with 6-month follow-up

Short-interval imaging to confirm stability of the biopsied area.

Benign biopsy, discordant
Repeat biopsy or surgical excision

If imaging was very suspicious but biopsy returns benign — the two results are discordant. Imaging wins. Further tissue sampling required.

Malignant biopsy
Breast MRI, surgical consultation, oncology referral, staging

Full workup and multidisciplinary team involvement initiated.

When Should I Be Concerned?

Do not delay if:

Related Topics

Does your report mention an irregular mass? The BI-RADS category assigned tells you the level of suspicion. 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.