Breast – Atypical Ductal Hyperplasia (ADH)

ADH is a neoplastic proliferation that shares some characteristics of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), but falls short quantitatively or qualitatively.  ADH is associated with a moderately increased risk of developing an invasive breast carcinoma (4-5x relative risk, 13-17% lifetime risk).
 
The morphology is similar to DCIS, but the findings do not entirely fill the duct spaces and/or don’t fulfill a quantitative size requirement for DCIS (some require 2 mm lesion).  In biopsy specimens it is important to perform an excision biopsy/lumpectomy because approximately 1/3rd of cases will have an associated higher grade lesion in the immediate vicinity (e.g. DCIS or an invasive carcinoma). 
Breast lesions and risk of developing an invasive carcinoma
Relative
Risk
Absolute
Risk
(lifetime)
Breast
Lesion
1
3%
1.5 – 2
5-7%
4 – 5
13-17%
8 – 10
25-30%
References

Robbins, p. 1050-1051