| Literature DB >> 29085457 |
Sultana Razia1, Kentaro Nakayama1, Mayu Tsukao1, Kohei Nakamura1, Masako Ishikawa1, Tomoka Ishibashi1, Noriyoshi Ishikawa2, Kaori Sanuki1, Hitomi Yamashita1, Ruriko Ono1, Mohammad Mahmud Hossain1, Toshiko Minamoto1, Satoru Kyo1.
Abstract
Haematogenous metastases of breast cancer tumors has previously been demonstrated to frequently occur at the sites of the lung, bones, liver and brain, however presence in the uterine remains a rare occurrence. Metastatic carcinoma of the uterus usually originates from other genital sites, most frequently from the ovaries. The current review presents the first reported case of lobular breast carcinoma metastasizing to an endometrial polyp, the cervix and a leiomyoma simultaneously. The patient (58 years, female) first presented with abnormal uterine bleeding. Invasive ductal carcinoma had previously been diagnosed in her right breast, with lobular and ductal cancer cells observed to be present in her lymph nodes. A hysteroscopic procedure to examine the postmenopausal bleeding revealed an endometrial polyp, which was subsequently resected. The morphology and immunohistochemical studies confirmed the diagnosis of metastasis of lobular breast carcinoma to an endometrial polyp. An 18F fludeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET-CT) scan performed following the diagnosis, revealed a slightly increased uptake in the myoma, which is often observed in benign uterine leiomyoma. The patient then underwent a total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and partial colectomy. Pathology results demonstrated that the uterine leiomyoma and cervix shared the same histopathological features as those presented by the primary lobular breast carcinoma. Although rare, breast tumors may metastasize to an endometrial polyp, cervix and leiomyoma concurrently in patients, therefore physicians may now consider the potential of the diagnosis of metastatic spread to the genital tract, in a patient with abnormal uterine bleeding and a history of lobular breast cancer. Gynecologists planning a laparoscopic hysterectomy for a patient with a history of lobular breast carcinoma may consider abdominal rather than laparoscopic hysterectomy, as lobular carcinoma is difficult to detect. The use of PET-CT may be beneficial for the identification of an unexpected mass.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; endometrial polyp; leiomyoma; metastasis
Year: 2017 PMID: 29085457 PMCID: PMC5649554 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2017.6822
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1.Magnetic resonance imaging of the pelvis. T2-weighted imaging revealed thickened endometrial myometrium (16×32 mm) with multicystic tumors.
Figure 2.Polyp-like tumor in the uterine cavity. The surface of the polyp is smooth.
Figure 3.Pathological examination. (A) microscopic image of ductal carcinoma of the right breast. (B) Immunohistochemical staining positive for E-cadherin of ductal carcinoma. (C) Microscopic image of lobular carcinoma of the lymph node. (D) Immunohistochemical staining negative for E-cadherin of lobular carcinoma of lymph node. (E) Metastatic tumor cells from breast lobular carcinoma of leiomyoma, cervix and an endometrial polyp (hematoxylin and eosin). (F) Immunohistochemical staining negative for E-cadherine of uterus.
Cases of resected breast cancer metastases to uterine leiomyoma.
| Case no. | Author's | Primary histology | Residual metastasis | Hormonal receptor | Postoperative therapy | Prognosis | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Di Bonito | Lobular carcinoma | Ovary and bone | Unknown | Unknown | Died, 5 months | ( |
| 2 | Sugiyama | Ductal carcinoma | AxLN and bone | Unknown | Unknown | Died, 14 months | ( |
| 3 | Charvolin | Ductal carcinoma | Nil | ER(+), PR(−) | C and E | Alive, 2 years | ( |
| 4 | Uner | Ductal carcinoma | AxLN and bone | ER(+), PR(−) | Unknown | Died, 4 months | ( |
| 5 | Liebmann | Lobular carcinoma | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | ( |
| 6 | Minelli | Ductal carcinoma | Bone and brain | ER(+), PR(+) | C and R | Died, 1 year | ( |
| 7 | Afriat | Lobular carcinoma | AxLN | Unknown | C and E | Alive, 4 years | ( |
| 8 | Beattie | Ductal carcinoma | AxLN and bone | Unknown | C | Unknown | ( |
| 9 | Spiro | Ductal carcinoma | AxLN and pleura | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | ( |
| 10 | Spiro | Lobular carcinoma | Liver | Unknown | C | Died, 1 year | ( |
| 11 | Banooni | Lobular carcinoma | AxLN and bone | Unknown | None | Unknown | ( |
| 12 | Birdsall | Ductal carcinoma | AxLN | Unknown | None | Alive, 10 months | ( |
| 13 | Weingold | Ductal carcinoma | Bone | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | ( |
| 14 | Current case | Ductal and lobular carcinoma | lymph node | ER(+), PR(+) HER2(2+) | C, R, and E | Alive |
ER, estrogen receptor; PR, progesterone receptor; AxLN, indicates axillary lymph nodes; C, chemotherapy; E, endocrine therapy; R, radiation therapy.
Reported cases of breast cancer with synchronous metastasis to the uterine cervix.
| Case no. | Author's | Patient no. | Age (yr) | Clinical presentation | Pap | Initial impression | Primary histology | Treatment | Survival | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hepp | 1 | 55 | Abdominal pain | NP | Cervical tumor | Lobular carcinoma | Mastectomy chemotherapy loop excision of cervical tumor | NM | ( |
| 2 | Song | 2 | 45 | AVB | + | Cervical cancer | Ductal carcinoma | Radiation | AAR (6 months) | ( |
| 3 | 49 | AVB | − | Cervical cancer | Ductal carcinoma | None | AAR (4 months) | |||
| 3 | Limoine | 4 | 39 | AVB | NP | Cervical cancer | Ductal carcinoma | NM | 6 months | ( |
| 4 | Fiorella | 5 | 54 | AVB | + | Endometrial cancer | Signet ring cell | None | 6 months | ( |
| 5 | Bogliolo | 6 | 78 | none | − | Cervical cancer | Lobular carcinoma | Quadrantectomy radiation (breast) chemotherapy | AAR (2.5 years) | ( |
| 6 | D'souza | 7 | 44 | AVB | + | Cervical cancer | Lobular carcinoma | NM | NM | ( |
| 7 | Horikawa | 8 | 52 | Abdominal discomfort | − | Leiomyoma | Lobular carcinoma | Hysterectomy mastectomy chemotherapy | AAR (7 years) | ( |
| 8 | Current case | 9 | 58 | AVB | − | Endometrial polyp | Ductal and lobular carcinoma | Radiation chemotherapy hormone therapy | Alive |
Pap, Pap smear; NP, not performed; AAR, alive at time of report; AVB, abnormal vaginal bleeding.
Summary of reported cases of breast cancer metastases to endometrial polyp.
| Case no. | Author's | Age | Histologic type primary tumor | Lymph node metastasis | Clinical symptom | Maximal diameter polyp (cm) | Treatment procedure | (Refs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kennebeck | 71 | Ductal | Yes | No | NM | Palliative RT/CT | ( |
| 2 | Hooker | 83 | Lobular | Yes | Vaginal bleeding | 3.5 | Polyp resection | ( |
| 3 | Sullivan | 83 | Ductal | Yes | No | 11.5 | TAH+BSO | ( |
| 4 | Corley | 58 | Ductal | Yes | Vaginal bleeding | NM | TAH+BSO | ( |
| 5 | Aranda | 76 | Lobular | No | No | 9 | TAH+BSO | ( |
| 6 | Martinez | 78 | Lobular | Yes | Vaginal bleeding | 3.3 | TAH+BSO | ( |
| 7 | Martinez | 58 | Ductal | Yes | Vaginal bleeding | NM | TAH+BSO | ( |
| 8 | Lambot | 70 | Apocrine | Yes | Vaginal bleeding | 1.5 | TAH+BSO | ( |
| 9 | Horn | 73 | Ductal | No | No | 8 | TAH+BSO | ( |
| 10 | Alvarez | 69 | Lobular | Yes | Vaginal bleeding | 1.5 | None d | ( |
| 11 | Houghton | 62 | Lobular | Yes | Vaginal bleeding | 3 | Polyp resection | ( |
| 12 | Houghton | 92 | Lobular | Unknown | Vaginal bleeding | 3 | Polyp resection | ( |
| 13 | Al-brahim | 53 | Lobular | Yes | Vaginal bleeding | 7 | Polyp resection | ( |
| 14 | Acikalin | 58 | Ductal | Yes | No | 5 | TAH+BSO | ( |
| 15 | Manipadam | 70 | Lobular | Yes | Vaginal bleeding | 3 | Polyp resection | ( |
| 16 | Aydin | 60 | Ductal | Unknown | Vaginal bleeding | 6.5 | CT, ANA | ( |
| 17 | Current case | 58 | Ductal and lobular | Yes | Vaginal bleeding | 3.2 | Polyp resection |
BSO, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy; RT, radiotherapy; CT, chemotherapy; ANA, anastrozole; NM, not mentioned; TAH, total abdominal hysterectomy.