| Literature DB >> 27957354 |
Masahide Kita1, Masashi Furukawa2, Masaya Iwamuro1, Keisuke Hori1, Yoshiro Kawahara3, Naruto Taira2, Tomohiro Nogami2, Tadahiko Shien2, Takehiro Tanaka4, Hiroyoshi Doihara2, Hiroyuki Okada1.
Abstract
A 52-year-old woman presented with stage IIB primary breast cancer (cT2N1M0), which was treated using neoadjuvant chemotherapy (epirubicin, cyclophosphamide, and paclitaxel). However, the tumor persisted in patchy areas; therefore, we performed modified radical mastectomy and axillary lymph node dissection. Routine endoscopy at 8 months revealed a depressed lesion on the gastric angle's greater curvature, and histology revealed signet ring cell proliferation. We performed endoscopic submucosal dissection for gastric cancer, although immunohistochemistry revealed that the tumor was positive for estrogen receptor, mammaglobin, and gross cystic disease fluid protein-15 (E-cadherin-negative). Therefore, we revised the diagnosis to gastric metastasis from the breast cancer.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27957354 PMCID: PMC5120190 DOI: 10.1155/2016/2085452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Gastrointest Med
Figure 1Histological analysis of the left breast. The initial diagnosis was scirrhous carcinoma, because the tumor cells were associated with a dense connective tissue in the stroma. The diagnosis was later revised to invasive lobular carcinoma.
Figure 2Esophagogastroduodenoscopy reveals a 0-IIc lesion with a size of 4 mm on the greater curvature of the gastric angle.
Figure 3Histopathology of the tumor, which was localized within the mucosal layer to the submucosal layer.
Figure 4Multiple recurrence was documented at 40 months after the endoscopic treatment.