| Literature DB >> 30756183 |
Sho Shiino1,2, Masayuki Yoshida3, Kenjiro Jimbo1, Sota Asaga1, Shin Takayama1, Akiko Maeshima4, Hitoshi Tsuda5, Takayuki Kinoshita1, Nobuyoshi Hiraoka4.
Abstract
Benign inclusions, such as endosalpingiosis, in an axillary sentinel lymph node (SLN) can be misdiagnosed as metastatic breast carcinoma. However, endosalpingiosis is rare in lymph nodes above the diaphragm. Among 792 patients with breast carcinoma who underwent sentinel lymph node biopsy at our center, 2 patients have experienced benign glandular inclusions in 3 SLNs, and all of these glandular inclusions were lined with columnar and ciliated epithelial cells. Immunohistochemistry revealed that the epithelial cells were positive for Müllerian markers (e.g., PAX8 and WT-1) and negative for mammary markers (e.g., mammaglobin, GCDFP-15, and GATA3), which confirm the diagnosis of endosalpingiosis. The epithelial cells were positive for CK19 but the one-step nucleic acid amplification assay revealed negative results for the axillary SLNs. Although endosalpingiosis is rare in axillary SLNs, care is needed to identify these rare cases and avoid unnecessary axillary lymph node dissection, overstaging, and overtreatment.Entities:
Keywords: Axillary sentinel lymph node; Benign glandular inclusion; Endosalpingiosis; Immunohistochemistry; OSNA assay
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30756183 DOI: 10.1007/s00428-019-02521-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virchows Arch ISSN: 0945-6317 Impact factor: 4.064