Mass Margin — Spiculated

Spiculated margin indicates lines radiating from the mass — the most suspicious mass margin descriptor.

Definition

The margin is characterized by lines radiating from the mass. This is the most suspicious mass margin for malignancy.

Imaging Appearance

  • Fine lines (spicules) extending outward from the mass periphery into surrounding breast tissue
  • Creates a “star-burst” or “sunburst” pattern
  • The lines represent desmoplastic reaction and tumor infiltration along tissue planes
  • Best seen on fat-suppressed early post-contrast T1W images

Suspicion Level

Most suspicious margin descriptor. Spiculated margin has the highest positive predictive value for malignancy of all mass margin descriptors.

Association with Malignancy

  • Invasive ductal carcinoma — classic spiculated, irregular mass
  • Invasive lobular carcinoma — can be spiculated; often irregular spiculated
  • Architectural distortion is related concept on mammography

Common Combinations in Source Figures

  • Irregular + spiculated + heterogeneous → IDC
  • Irregular + spiculated + thick rim enhancement → Invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC)
  • Irregular + spiculated + homogeneous → IDC (homogeneous can occur)

Associated Features to Look For

When a spiculated mass is identified, evaluate for:

  • Skin retraction or skin involvement
  • Nipple retraction
  • Pectoralis muscle involvement
  • Axillary lymphadenopathy

Board Pearl

Spiculated margin is the single most suspicious individual mass descriptor on breast MRI. A spiculated mass should be considered highly suspicious for malignancy (BI-RADS 4C or 5) unless there is a compelling benign explanation (e.g., post-surgical scar).

Benign Causes of Spiculation (Rare)

  • Post-surgical scar — architectural distortion/spiculation at lumpectomy site; often non-enhancing
  • Fat necrosis — can create spiculation; often T1 bright fat signal helps