| Literature DB >> 23760790 |
Yiwang Ye1, Zhimin Mu, DA Wu, Yuancai Xie.
Abstract
Pulmonary sequestration (PS) is an uncommon lung disease. Carcinoid tumorlets in pulmonary sequestration are extremely rare. This case report presents a rare clinical case of carcinoid tumorlet in pulmonary sequestration with bronchiectasis after breast cancer. A 64-year-old female was diagnosed with infiltrating ductal carcinoma of the left breast in February 2009. Chest computer tomography (CT) revealed a cystic low-density mass of ∼2.5×4.7 cm in the right lower lung field, as well as cystic bronchiectasis in the right lower lobe. A right lower lobectomy was performed. In the surgery, abnormal vessel growth from the mass was found. Therefore, intralobar PS was diagnosed and pathological examination supported the diagnosis. Subsequently, pathological examination identified a carcinoid tumorlet in the PS. This report presents a rare clinical case of PS and bronchiectasis as well as carcinoid tumorlet in PS following diagnosis of breast cancer three years earlier. When a mass is found in the lung of patents with bronchiectasis with a history of breast cancer, aggressive therapy should be considered, since the mass may be a tumor or precancerous lesion.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; bronchiectasis; carcinoid tumorlet; pulmonary sequestration
Year: 2013 PMID: 23760790 PMCID: PMC3678756 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2013.1210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1Pathological examination of resected breast cancer. (A) The macroscopic section of the resected breast mass. (B) The macroscopic section of the resected left breast. The pathological specimens demonstrates (C) poorly differentiated infiltrating ductal carcinoma and (D) the metastatic lymph node (H&E staining, ×100).
Figure 2Images before lower lobectomy surgery. (A) The chest X-ray showed a striped high-density mass in the right lung above the diaphragmatic surface (arrow). (B) Chest computer tomography (CT) revealed a cystic low-density mass of ∼2.5×4.7 cm in the right lower lung field (arrow), as well as cystic bronchiectasis and pneumonia in the right lower lobe.
Figure 3(A) Histological examination of resected lung tissue (H&E staining, ×100/×400). The arrow (a) shows the abnormal artery from the descending thoracic aorta to the resected mass. The arrow (b) shows a nodule in the mass. (B) Using immunohistochemistry, the carcinoma cells were positive for CD56, CK-L, synaptophysin, TIF1, cromogranin A and Ki-67 (<1% positive) and negative for S-100 (magnification, ×100).