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Sentinel Lymph Node Involvement by Epithelial Inclusions Mimicking Metastatic Carcinoma: A Diagnostic Pitfall

Patient: Female, 70-year-old Final Diagnosis: Epithelial inclusion cysts Symptoms: Abnormal mammogram findings Medication:— Clinical Procedure: — Specialty: Pathology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: An epithelial inclusion cyst within a lymph node denotes a heterotopic phenomenon. Nodal epitheli...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sigei, Asha C., Bartow, Brooke B., Wheeler, Yurong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7703487/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33245711
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.926094
Descripción
Sumario:Patient: Female, 70-year-old Final Diagnosis: Epithelial inclusion cysts Symptoms: Abnormal mammogram findings Medication:— Clinical Procedure: — Specialty: Pathology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: An epithelial inclusion cyst within a lymph node denotes a heterotopic phenomenon. Nodal epithelial inclusion cysts have been reported in a variety of anatomical locations including pelvic, abdominal, mediastinal, and axillary regions. While nodal melanocytic nevus (also known as nevus cell aggregates) is the most common heterotopic phenomena involving the axillary lymph nodes, the presence of benign epithelial inclusion cysts in axillary lymph nodes is a rare but well-reported finding. Such documentation is in part due to assessment of sentinel lymph nodes in breast cancer becoming standard of care. These epithelial inclusion cysts offer a diagnostic pitfall in evaluation of sentinel lymph node in the setting of breast carcinoma. They also complicate assessment of sentinel lymph node during intraoperative frozen sections analysis. CASE REPORT: We report a case of co-existent of benign squamous-type and glandular-type epithelial inclusions cysts in 2 sentinel lymph nodes in a patient with grade III invasive ductal carcinoma involving the left breast. There have been at least 4 cases reported in literature in which benign epithelial inclusion cysts in sentinel lymph nodes were first mistakenly diagnosed as metastatic carcinoma both during intraoperative frozen section analysis and during review of permanent sections. The missed diagnosis could potentially occur intraoperatively during frozen section sentinel lymph node analysis secondarily due to lack of availability of the primary tumor for comparison and inability to use immunohistochemical stains. CONCLUSIONS: Pathologists should be aware of this pitfall especially in frozen section analysis of sentinel lymph node to avoid misdiagnosis and its associated potential grave consequences.