| Literature DB >> 25502729 |
Melinda E Sanders1, Peggy A Schuyler2, Jean F Simpson3, David L Page4, William D Dupont2.
Abstract
Opportunities to study the natural history of ductal carcinoma in situ are rare. A few studies of incompletely excised lesions in the premammographic era, retrospectively recognized as ductal carcinoma in situ, have demonstrated a proclivity for local recurrence in the original site. The authors report a follow-up study of 45 women with low-grade ductal carcinoma in situ treated by biopsy only, recognized retrospectively during a larger review of surgical pathology diagnoses and original histological slides for 26 539 consecutive breast biopsies performed at Vanderbilt, Baptist and St Thomas Hospitals in Nashville, TN from 1950 to 1989. Long-term follow-up was previously reported on 28 of these women. Sixteen women (36%) developed invasive breast carcinoma, all in the same breast and quadrant as their incident ductal carcinoma in situ. Eleven invasive breast carcinomas were diagnosed within 10 years of the ductal carcinoma in situ biopsy. Subsequent cases were diagnosed at 12, 23, 25, 29 and 42 years. Seven women, including one who developed invasive breast cancer 29 years after her ductal carcinoma in situ biopsy, developed distant metastasis, resulting in death 1-7 years postdiagnosis of invasive breast carcinoma. The natural history of low-grade ductal carcinoma in situ may extend more than four decades, with invasive breast cancer developing at the same site as the index lesion. This protracted natural history differs markedly from that of patients with high-grade ductal carcinoma in situ or any completely delimited ductal carcinoma in situ excised to negative margins. This study reaffirms the importance of complete margin evaluation in women treated with breast conservation for ductal carcinoma in situ as well as balancing recurrence risk with possible treatment-related morbidity for older women.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25502729 PMCID: PMC4416977 DOI: 10.1038/modpathol.2014.141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 7.842
Women with DCIS who developed invasive breast cancer or a second DCIS
| Patient # | Age at DX DCIS | Histotype index DCIS | Time from DCIS diagnosis to IBC diagnos is (yrs) | Tumor type, grade, LN status | Treatment type | Status (years since IBC and last contact or death), Cause of death | Reference if previously reported |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 60 | MIX | 3 | NST, Intermediate, negative | Mastectomy | DOC (15) | |
| 2 | 33 | MP | 3 | Unknown, unknown, unknown | Mastectomy | DOD (2), MBC | [ |
| 3 | 53 | S | 5 | Pure ILC, Low, positive | Mastectomy | DOD (2), MBC | |
| 4 | 45 | S | 5 | NST, Intermediate, unknown | Mastectomy | DOD (4), MBC | [ |
| 5 | 38 | MIX | 7 | NST, Low, negative | Mastectomy | DOD (7), MBC | [ |
| 6 | 47 | C | 7 | NST, High, positive | Mastectomy | A&W (3) | [ |
| 7 | 46 | C | 8 | NST, Low, negative | Mastectomy | A&W (12) | [ |
| 8 | 55 | MIX | 8 | NST, Low, positive | Mastectomy | A&W (22) | [ |
| 9 | 76 | MP | 8 | NST with lobular features, IG, positive | Mastectomy | DOD (2), MBC | |
| 10 | 44 | C | 10 | Unknown, unknown, positive | Mastectomy | DOD (3), MBC | [ |
| 11 | 74 | S | 10 | NST, Low, positive | Mastectomy | DOC (2) | [ |
| 12 | 64 | MIX | 12 | Unknown, unknown, positive | Mastectomy | DOC (15) | |
| 13 | 57 | C | 23 | NST with tubular features, Low, negative | Mastectomy | DOC (16) | [ |
| 14 | 62 | C | 25 | Unknown, unknown, unknown | Mastectomy | DOC (<1) | |
| 15 | 42 | MIX | 29 | Unknown, unknown, positive | Mastectomy | DOD (5), MBC | [ |
| 16 | 37 | MIX | 42 | NST with tubular features, Low, no lymph nodes sampled | Mastectomy | DOC (3) | [ |
Status at last contact: A&W = alive and well, AWD = alive with disease, DOD = dead of disease, DOC = dead of other causes; MBC = metastatic breast cancer
DCIS histotype: cribriform = C; micropapillary = MP; solid = S; MIX = variable combinations of cribriform, solid and micropapillary; ENIPC = encysted non-invasive papillary carcinoma
Figure 1Cumulative breast cancer morbidity and mortality curves among the 45 women with low-grade DCIS. Any woman with non-comedo DCIS who has not received definitive treatment remains at risk for a prolonged period after this diagnosis.
Women with DCIS who did not developed subsequent carcinomas
| Patient # | Age at DX DCIS | Histotype index DCIS | Status (years since DCIS and last contact or death), Cause of death | Reference if previously reported |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 77 | C | DOC (1) | |
| 2 | 80 | C | DOC (2) | |
| 3 | 73 | C | DOC (2) | [ |
| 4 | 78 | MP | DOC (8) | |
| 5 | 72 | S | DOC (8) | [ |
| 6 | 85 | MIX | DOC (8) | |
| 7 | 60 | C | DOC (12) | |
| 8 | 72 | C | DOC (15) | |
| 9 | 44 | C | DOC (17) | [ |
| 10 | 49 | MP | A&W (20) | [ |
| 11 | 45 | S | A&W (21) | [ |
| 12 | 59 | S | A&W (23) | [ |
| 13 | 67 | A | DOC (24) | [ |
| 14 | 55 | MIX | DOC (30) | |
| 15 | 57 | C | DOC (31) | [ |
| 16 | 50 | ECNIP, MP | DOC (31) | [ |
| 17 | 47 | MIX | A&W (35) | [ |
| 18 | 53 | C | DOC (37) | [ |
| 19 | 47 | C | A&W (39) | |
| 20 | 34 | C | A&W (41) | [ |
| 21 | 52 | S | A&W (42) | |
| 22 | 43 | S | DOC (42) | |
| 23 | 35 | MP | A&W (46) | [ |
| 24 | 46 | S | A&W (46) | [ |
| 25 | 47 | S | DOC (46) | [ |
| 26 | 38 | S | A&W (47) |
DCIS histotype: cribriform = C; micropapillary = MP; solid = S; A = apocrine; MIX = variable combinations of cribriform, solid and micropapillary; ENIPC = encysted non-invasive papillary carcinoma
Index DCIS histotype with respect to development of carcinoma
| DCIS histotype | All patients | Patients with subsequent IBC | Patients with second DCIS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cribriform | 15 | 5 | 0 |
| Solid | 11 | 3 | 0 |
| Mixed | 10 | 6 | 1 |
| Micropapillary | 5 | 2 | 0 |
| Pure apocrine | 2 | 0 | 1 |
| Encysted non-invasive papillary carcinoma | 2 | 0 | 1 |
Mixed = variable combinations of cribriform, solid and micropapillary patterns