Other Finding — Cysts
A circumscribed, round or oval, fluid-filled mass with a thin wall, representing one of the most common benign findings on breast MRI. Cysts are classified under other findings typically benign in the BI-RADS v2025 MRI lexicon and warrant no further workup when imaging characteristics are classic.
Definition
A breast cyst is a fluid-filled epithelial-lined structure arising from the terminal duct lobular unit (TDLU). They are extremely common, occurring in up to 50% of women of reproductive age. On MRI, the diagnosis is made by characteristic signal behavior across sequences without need for aspiration or biopsy when findings are unequivocal.
MRI Appearance
T2-Weighted
- Homogeneously hyperintense (fluid-bright), approaching CSF signal intensity
- Signal intensity may vary with protein or blood content
T1-Weighted (Pre-contrast)
- Hypointense (dark) in simple cysts
- T1 hyperintense when contents are proteinaceous or hemorrhagic — these are termed complicated cysts
- T1 hyperintensity does NOT indicate malignancy; it reflects altered fluid composition
Post-contrast (Dynamic)
- No internal enhancement — this is the defining feature separating a cyst from a solid mass
- May show thin peripheral peri-cystic enhancement of adjacent parenchymal tissue — this is benign and represents enhancing compressed breast tissue around the cyst wall
- The inner contour of peri-cystic enhancement is smooth (“solar eclipse” appearance)
DWI / ADC
- No restricted diffusion in simple cysts
- Complicated cysts may show T2 shine-through mimicking restricted diffusion — always confirm on ADC map
- True restricted diffusion within a cystic structure should raise concern for intracystic papillary carcinoma or abscess
Board Pearl
Thin peri-cystic enhancement is benign — the inner contour is smooth (“solar eclipse” appearance). Thick rim enhancement is suspicious — the inner contour is uneven and irregular. This distinction between thin peri-cystic and thick rim enhancement is a key board question.
Board Pearl
A T1-bright, T2-bright lesion with NO internal enhancement is a complicated cyst (BI-RADS 2), not a suspicious finding. The key discriminator is always the absence of internal enhancement.
Subtypes
| Subtype | T1 Signal | T2 Signal | Enhancement | Management |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simple cyst | Hypointense | Hyperintense | None | BI-RADS 2 — benign |
| Complicated cyst (proteinaceous) | Hyperintense | Variable (often intermediate) | None | BI-RADS 2 — benign |
| Complicated cyst (hemorrhagic) | Hyperintense | Variable | None | BI-RADS 2 — benign |
| Complex cystic mass | Variable | Variable | Enhancing solid component | BI-RADS 4 — biopsy |
| Clustered microcysts | Hypointense | Hyperintense | None internally | BI-RADS 2-3 depending on context |
Differential Diagnosis
| Entity | Key Distinguishing Feature |
|---|---|
| Fibroadenoma (myxoid) | T2 bright but shows internal enhancement; solid on ultrasound |
| Intracystic papillary carcinoma | Enhancing mural nodule or solid component within cystic structure |
| Abscess | Thick rim enhancement with irregular inner margin; clinical context (pain, erythema, fever) |
| Mucinous carcinoma | T2 hyperintense but demonstrates internal enhancement; may mimic complicated cyst on T2 alone |
| Seroma | Post-surgical, may have thin rim; clinical history of recent procedure |
| Galactocele | Lactating patient; fat-fluid level may be present |
Board Pearl
Mucinous (colloid) carcinoma is the great mimicker of cysts — it is T2 hyperintense due to mucin content. Always check post-contrast sequences. Any internal enhancement within a “cyst” demands further evaluation.
Clinical Significance & Management
- Simple and complicated cysts are BI-RADS 2 (benign) — no follow-up needed
- A cyst with an enhancing solid component is a complex cystic mass and should be assessed as BI-RADS 4 or higher
- Clustered microcysts without enhancement are typically BI-RADS 2; if new or growing, may warrant short-interval follow-up (BI-RADS 3)
- Cysts may obscure adjacent lesions — careful evaluation of surrounding tissue on subtraction images is essential
Pitfalls
- T2 shine-through on DWI — Complicated cysts may appear bright on DWI; always check the ADC map to confirm there is no true restricted diffusion
- Mistaking peri-cystic for rim enhancement — Thin smooth peri-cystic enhancement (benign) vs. thick irregular rim enhancement (suspicious). The inner contour is the key: smooth = benign, irregular = suspicious
- Fat saturation failure — Incomplete fat suppression can make fat-containing lesions (e.g., oil cysts, hamartomas) mimic fluid; confirm on T1 without fat sat
- Ignoring enhancement in T2-bright lesions — Always evaluate post-contrast sequences. A T2-bright lesion that enhances internally is NOT a simple cyst
- Clustered microcysts vs. NME — Grouped tiny cysts can mimic Non-Mass Enhancement on post-contrast imaging; T2 sequences clarify the cystic nature
Board Pearl
When a lesion is T2 hyperintense, the single most important next step is to evaluate post-contrast sequences. No internal enhancement = cyst. Internal enhancement = solid or complex — needs workup.
v2025 Considerations
In BI-RADS v2025, cysts remain classified under other findings typically benign. The key v2025 emphasis is on the distinction between thin peri-cystic enhancement (benign, retained from prior editions) and the newly renamed thick rim enhancement descriptor (previously called “rim enhancement” in the 5th edition), which is suspicious.