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Primary Epithelioid Angiosarcoma of the Breast: A Rare and Challenging Biopsy Diagnosis

Patient: Female, 70 Final Diagnosis: Primary epithelioid angiosarcoma of the breast Symptoms: Fungating • necrotic breast mass Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Biopsy Specialty: Oncology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Primary angiosarcoma of the breast is a rare neoplasm, accounting for less t...

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Autores principales: Mendoza, Rachelle, Loukeris, Kristina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6459162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30940796
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.913068
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author Mendoza, Rachelle
Loukeris, Kristina
author_facet Mendoza, Rachelle
Loukeris, Kristina
author_sort Mendoza, Rachelle
collection PubMed
description Patient: Female, 70 Final Diagnosis: Primary epithelioid angiosarcoma of the breast Symptoms: Fungating • necrotic breast mass Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Biopsy Specialty: Oncology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Primary angiosarcoma of the breast is a rare neoplasm, accounting for less than 0.04% of all breast cancers. Epithelioid angiosarcoma is even more unusual with only a handful of cases reported in literature. Differentiating this from other breast malignancy is a challenge. There have been conflicting reports regarding factors that affect prognosis. We present a case of primary epithelioid angiosarcoma of the breast, and also discuss the prognostic and differential diagnostic issues. CASE REPORT: A 70-year old female presented with slowly enlarging fungating mass in the right breast with a necrotic center and serosanguineous discharge. Initial biopsy done at an outside institution reported the lesion as carcinosarcoma. Histologic sections showed cellular, infiltrative neoplasm with extensive necrosis and ectatic vascular proliferations lined by plump endothelial cells. Infiltrative cells were spindle-shaped with vacuolated cytoplasm and marked anisonucleosis in myxoid background. Mitotic activity was brisk. CAM5.2, AE1/AE3, and CD31 were positive. Proliferation index was high. Estrogen receptors (ER), progesterone receptors (PR), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)/neu were negative. CONCLUSIONS: Primary epithelioid angiosarcoma of the breast can present as a diagnostic dilemma in needle biopsies. This malignancy may mimic carcinoma or benign endothelial lesions. This entity is important to be recognized because it carries poor prognostic risk and requires distinct treatment modalities different from the usual epithelial breast neoplasms.
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spelling pubmed-64591622019-04-23 Primary Epithelioid Angiosarcoma of the Breast: A Rare and Challenging Biopsy Diagnosis Mendoza, Rachelle Loukeris, Kristina Am J Case Rep Articles Patient: Female, 70 Final Diagnosis: Primary epithelioid angiosarcoma of the breast Symptoms: Fungating • necrotic breast mass Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Biopsy Specialty: Oncology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Primary angiosarcoma of the breast is a rare neoplasm, accounting for less than 0.04% of all breast cancers. Epithelioid angiosarcoma is even more unusual with only a handful of cases reported in literature. Differentiating this from other breast malignancy is a challenge. There have been conflicting reports regarding factors that affect prognosis. We present a case of primary epithelioid angiosarcoma of the breast, and also discuss the prognostic and differential diagnostic issues. CASE REPORT: A 70-year old female presented with slowly enlarging fungating mass in the right breast with a necrotic center and serosanguineous discharge. Initial biopsy done at an outside institution reported the lesion as carcinosarcoma. Histologic sections showed cellular, infiltrative neoplasm with extensive necrosis and ectatic vascular proliferations lined by plump endothelial cells. Infiltrative cells were spindle-shaped with vacuolated cytoplasm and marked anisonucleosis in myxoid background. Mitotic activity was brisk. CAM5.2, AE1/AE3, and CD31 were positive. Proliferation index was high. Estrogen receptors (ER), progesterone receptors (PR), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)/neu were negative. CONCLUSIONS: Primary epithelioid angiosarcoma of the breast can present as a diagnostic dilemma in needle biopsies. This malignancy may mimic carcinoma or benign endothelial lesions. This entity is important to be recognized because it carries poor prognostic risk and requires distinct treatment modalities different from the usual epithelial breast neoplasms. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2019-04-03 /pmc/articles/PMC6459162/ /pubmed/30940796 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.913068 Text en © Am J Case Rep, 2019 This work is licensed under Creative Common Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) )
spellingShingle Articles
Mendoza, Rachelle
Loukeris, Kristina
Primary Epithelioid Angiosarcoma of the Breast: A Rare and Challenging Biopsy Diagnosis
title Primary Epithelioid Angiosarcoma of the Breast: A Rare and Challenging Biopsy Diagnosis
title_full Primary Epithelioid Angiosarcoma of the Breast: A Rare and Challenging Biopsy Diagnosis
title_fullStr Primary Epithelioid Angiosarcoma of the Breast: A Rare and Challenging Biopsy Diagnosis
title_full_unstemmed Primary Epithelioid Angiosarcoma of the Breast: A Rare and Challenging Biopsy Diagnosis
title_short Primary Epithelioid Angiosarcoma of the Breast: A Rare and Challenging Biopsy Diagnosis
title_sort primary epithelioid angiosarcoma of the breast: a rare and challenging biopsy diagnosis
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6459162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30940796
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.913068
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