| Literature DB >> 29751600 |
Ilaria Testa1, Cristina Salvatori2, Marco Prestipino3, Maria Elena Laurenti4, Paolo Gerli5, Giuseppe Di Cara6, Nicola Principi7, Susanna Esposito8, Mirko Bertozzi9.
Abstract
Introduction: Phylloides tumours (PTs) are rare fibroepithelial neoplasms that account for 0.3⁻0.9% of all breast tumours. These tumours typically occur in women aged 30⁻70 years. The occurrence of these tumours in older children and adolescents poses particular diagnostic and therapeutic problems. However, early diagnosis is mandatory because although most of the cases of PTs in children are benign, the borderline and malignant cases with potential negative outcomes cannot be excluded. Case presentation: A 12-year-old girl presented at the Paediatric Emergency Department for hyperaemia and warmth of the left breast that occurred a few days prior without fever. The girl experienced menarche 8 months previously. She experienced no previous trauma and she had no family history of breast cancer. On physical examination, the left breast was painful, enlarged and tender. The overlying skin was erythematous and warm. A breast ultrasonography (US) revealed a large mass with features of an abscess, including a hyperechoic wall, scattered internal echoes and hypoechoic peripheral lacunae of apparent colliquative nature. After 4 days of unsuccessful antibiotic therapy, surgical drainage was performed due to the suspicion of a mammary abscess. At the surgical incision site, the lesion was not-well circumscribed and lacked a capsule. In addition, purulent material was not detected. Histological examination revealed that the tissue alterations were compatible with benign PT. With this diagnosis, the girl underwent definitive surgical removal of the lesion. The postoperative period passed without negative events. An US performed 6 months later revealed that no new mass was present at this time, suggesting no recurrence of the tumour.Entities:
Keywords: breast abscess; breast tumours; phylloides tumours
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29751600 PMCID: PMC5981998 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15050959
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Left breast of a 12-year-old girl: it was painful, enlarged and tender with the overlying skin that was erythematous and warm.
Figure 2(a) Breast ultrasound (US) shows hyperechoic wall; scattered internal echoes and hypoechoic peripheral lacunae of colliquative nature; and (b) Doppler US demonstrated increased peripheral and intralesional vascularity with axillary reactive lymphadenopathy.
Figure 3Histological findings in the study patient. (a,b) (Haematoxylin-Eosin, 100×): different fields of the lesion showing the pericanalicular pattern of the epithelial component (arrow) and stromal cellularity ranging from mild (a) to discrete (b). On closer examination ((c), 200×), the stromal fibroblasts are more densely packed near the epithelial component (arrowhead), with sparse intermingled lymphocytes. No mitosis was documented in 50 high power fields.