Associated Feature — Skin Retraction

Skin retraction is defined as the skin being pulled inward abnormally, creating a visible concavity or dimpling of the skin surface. The mechanism involves traction on Cooper’s ligaments or the overlying dermis by an underlying lesion or scar. In BI-RADS v2025, skin retraction is listed as associated feature #3 under the MRI lexicon (BI-RADS MRI p. 109).

Definition

  • Focal inward displacement of the skin surface toward an underlying process
  • Caused by shortening or fibrosis of Cooper’s ligaments or direct tethering by tumor/scar
  • Distinct from skin thickening (morphologic change only, no inward pull) and skin involvement (definitive enhancement extending into the skin)

Imaging Appearance

MRI Sequences

  • Fat-suppressed post-contrast T1W (early phase): Best sequence to identify skin retraction — the enhancing skin is pulled inward toward an underlying lesion. Evaluate whether the underlying lesion enhances (suspicious) or not (postsurgical)
  • T2W / STIR: May show the tethered skin and underlying edema or seroma at a surgical site
  • Non-contrast T1W: Can demonstrate the morphologic contour deformity; important to distinguish from skin thickening alone
  • DWI: Not directly useful for skin retraction itself, but assess the underlying mass for restricted diffusion if present

Key Imaging Features

  • Look for a V-shaped or tented contour of the skin pointing inward
  • Evaluate the underlying cause: enhancing mass (suspicious) vs. non-enhancing scar/seroma (benign postsurgical)
  • Check for associated skin enhancement — if present, this upgrades to Associated Feature — Skin Involvement
  • Note whether there is an associated spiculated mass — the combination of Mass Margin — Spiculated + skin retraction is highly suspicious

Board Pearl

Skin retraction without skin enhancement is a critical distinction. In BI-RADS v2025 Figure 1 (p. 109), a round spiculated thick rim enhancing mass causes skin retraction but there is no skin enhancement — skin retraction and skin involvement are separate descriptors with different implications.

Etiologies

EtiologyMechanismDistinguishing Features
Invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC)Desmoplastic reaction → Cooper’s ligament shorteningEnhancing spiculated mass, often with associated peritumoral edema
Invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC)Diffuse infiltration with desmoplasiaMay have subtle or no mass; NME pattern; retraction may be the dominant finding
Prior surgery / scarringFibrosis and scar contractureNo abnormal enhancement; seroma at surgical site; stable on prior exams
Fat necrosisPost-traumatic or postsurgical fibrosisPeripheral enhancement with internal fat signal on non-fat-suppressed T1W; often at surgical site
Radiation therapyPost-treatment fibrosisDiffuse skin thickening + retraction in radiation field; history confirms

Differential Diagnosis: Malignant vs. Benign Skin Retraction

FeatureMalignantBenign (Postsurgical)
Underlying enhancementSuspicious mass or NMENo abnormal enhancement (scar/seroma)
Stability on priorsNew or progressiveStable
Skin enhancementMay be present (→ skin involvement)Absent
Associated findingsSpiculation, peritumoral edema, axillary LADSeroma, architectural distortion at scar
Clinical historyNo prior surgery at sitePrior surgery at site

Board Pearl

ILC is the classic “skin retraction without obvious mass” scenario. Invasive lobular carcinoma can cause prominent skin retraction with only subtle NME or architectural distortion on MRI. If you see skin retraction without a clear mass, search carefully for ILC — it is the great mimicker.

Clinical Significance

  • In the absence of suspicious findings and particularly when stable, skin retraction alone is not suspicious (BI-RADS v2025, p. 109)
  • When associated with an underlying suspicious mass or NME, skin retraction supports a malignant assessment and affects T-staging
  • Skin retraction alone does not constitute T4b staging — direct skin invasion (Associated Feature — Skin Involvement) is required for T4b
  • Important for surgical planning: location and degree of retraction influence cosmetic outcome and reconstruction approach

Staging Implications

  • Skin retraction by itself does not change T-stage — it is an associated feature, not an invasion criterion
  • If the underlying tumor directly invades skin (enhancement extending into skin), this becomes skin involvementT4b
  • Always report skin retraction separately from skin involvement in structured reporting

Pitfalls

  1. Confusing skin retraction with skin involvement: Retraction = morphologic pulling inward; involvement = definitive skin enhancement. The two may coexist but are reported separately
  2. Overlooking ILC: Subtle or absent mass with prominent skin retraction — always search for a diffuse infiltrating process
  3. Attributing retraction to surgery without comparing priors: New skin retraction at a surgical site may indicate recurrence — always compare with prior post-treatment baseline
  4. Ignoring contralateral comparison: Compare skin contour with the opposite breast to confirm subtle retraction is real
  5. Motion artifact: Patient motion can simulate skin irregularity — confirm on multiple sequences

Board Pearl

BI-RADS v2025 explicitly illustrates benign skin retraction (Figure 4, p. 110): postsurgical scarring with seroma and no abnormal enhancement. This is the key teaching case — not all skin retraction is malignant. The absence of suspicious enhancement + stability = benign assessment.

v2025 Key Points

  • Skin retraction remains listed as associated feature #3 in the v2025 MRI lexicon, consistent with the 5th edition
  • The v2025 text reinforces the principle that context determines suspicion: retraction alone in the absence of suspicious findings and when stable is not suspicious
  • Four figure examples in v2025 demonstrate the spectrum: IDC-associated (Figures 1-2), ILC-associated (Figure 3), and benign postsurgical (Figure 4)