| Literature DB >> 27429817 |
Meghan E Kapp1, Giovanna A Giannico1, Mohamed Mokhtar Desouki1.
Abstract
Cancer of the male breast is an uncommon event with metastases to the breast occurring even less frequently. Prostate carcinoma has been reported as the most frequent primary to metastasize to the breast; however, the reverse has not been previously reported. Herein, we present, for the first time, a case of breast carcinoma metastasizing to the prostate gland. Prostate needle core biopsy revealed infiltrative nests of neoplastic epithelioid cells, demonstrated by immunohistochemistry (IHC) to be positive for GATA3 and ER and negative for PSA and P501S. A prostate cocktail by IHC study demonstrated lack of basal cells (p63 and CK903) and no expression of P501S. The patient's previous breast needle core biopsy showed strong ER positivity and negative staining for PR and HER2. Similar to the prostate, the breast was negative for CK5/6, p63, and p40. This case demonstrates the importance of considering a broad differential diagnosis and comparing histology and IHC to prior known malignancies in the setting of atypical presentation or rare tumors.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27429817 PMCID: PMC4939205 DOI: 10.1155/2016/8264140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Oncol Med
Figure 1Breast core biopsy shows infiltrative nests of epithelioid cells with small ovoid hyperchromatic nuclei and modest eosinophilic cytoplasm separated by fibrous stroma with a desmoplastic reaction on H&E. Immunohistochemical stains show nuclear staining for ER and negative staining for PR and CK5/6.
Figure 2Prostate needle core biopsy shows infiltrative nests of hyperchromatic nuclei with modest eosinophilic cytoplasm separated by fibrous stroma with a desmoplastic reaction on H&E. Immunohistochemical stains show nuclear staining for ER and GATA3 and negative staining by PSA.