| Literature DB >> 31608201 |
Abstract
Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths amongst American women aged 20 to 59. While the incidence of breast cancer has been increasing, its mortality rates have significantly declined from 1989 to 2016. As a result, the number of survivors considerably increased. This impacts the detection and management of recurrences. Peritoneal metastases from breast cancer is a rare and challenging clinical presentation. There is a lack of knowledge syntheses and specific recommendations for the management of breast cancer peritoneal metastases. This review aims to determine the pattern of spread, prognosis, diagnosis, and role of surgery in this subset of patients. Relevant studies were searched in PubMed and Web of Science between April and June 2019. Included studies were written in English and reported data on breast cancer peritoneal or gastrointestinal metastases. Articles published before 1990, case reports, editorials, and articles with no full text available were excluded. Data abstraction was performed for citation information, population, sample, methods, relevant results, mentioned limitations, and study design. The search identified 505 unique reports. A total of 21 articles were included in the synthesis. Sixteen articles were observational studies, four were experimental, and one article was a proof-of-concept study. Amongst all observational studies, the diagnostic methods and criteria for breast cancer carcinomatosis were particularly heterogeneous, including ascites cytology, biopsy, surgical exploration, and various computed tomography (CT) findings. The majority of pathology and imaging reports demonstrated that breast cancer peritoneal metastases are mainly associated with invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC) and the following intrinsic subtypes: HER2-enriched, luminal B and basal-like. Experimental studies demonstrated that peritoneal metastases can be studied using breast cancer xenograft models. Somatic loss of both p53 and E-cadherin was associated with ILC peritoneal spread. Studies on prognosis and treatment highlighted that peritoneal metastases were associated with a poorer prognosis than other metastatic sites. In terms of surgical management, there is a paucity of data on the outcomes of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) in these patients. However, included studies suggested a role for cytoreductive surgery in selected patients when there is no residual disease after the procedure. This review summarizes data on the development, diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of breast cancer peritoneal and gastrointestinal metastases. Patients' survival is significantly reduced in comparison with other distant metastatic sites. A deeper understanding of the invasion mechanisms and the role of surgery will be important.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; cytoreductive surgery; hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (hipec); peritoneal metastases
Year: 2019 PMID: 31608201 PMCID: PMC6783220 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.5367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Prisma flow diagram
Characteristics of included studies and main objectives
CEA: carcinoembryogenic antigen; HIPEC: hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy; ILC: invasive lobular carcinoma; IDC: invasive ductal carcinoma; MMP: matrix metalloproteinase; USA: United States of America
[5-25]
| Article | Design | Objectives | Total N | Methods | Mentioned limitations |
| Pattern of spread (N=10) | |||||
| Lamovec, 1991 (Slovenia) | Cohort study | Difference in metastatic sites between ILC and IDC | 226 | Retrospective review of autopsy records and histology | None |
| Antic, 2010 (USA) | Cohort study | Tumor type and single-cell pattern of peritoneal effusions in metastatic breast cancer | 819 | Retrospective review of patients’ pathologic reports and clinical files | None |
| Jain, 1993 (USA) | Cohort study | Differences in metastatic sites between ILC and IDC | 1391 | Retrospective review of clinical records | None |
| Inoue, 2017 (Japan) | Cohort study | Clinical significance of peritoneal metastases from breast cancer | 330 | Retrospective review of clinical records | None |
| Winston, 2000 (USA) | Cohort study | Pattern of spread of metastatic ILC to the chest, abdomen and pelvis | 57 | Retrospective review of CT images | No direct comparison with IDC; CT is not the gold standard for diagnosis; Biopsy-proven metastases not performed in all patients. |
| DiPiro, 2019 (USA) | Cohort study | Frequency, patterns and prognosis of ILC with abdominal metastases | 116 | Retrospective analysis of CT images | Retrospective design; Lack of generalizability (tertiary center); Variability in timing and number of images between patients; No cross-checking. |
| Kennecke, 2010 (Canada) | Experimental, correlational | Correlations between breast cancer molecular subtypes and distant metastatic site | 3726 | Tissue microarray and immunohistochemical analyses | Changes in adjuvant therapy guidelines over time; Overestimation of the risk of relapse; |
| Mitra, 2006 (USA) | Experimental | Role of intrinsic FAK (Focal Adhesion Kinase) activity in promoting tumor progression | 24 | Whole-body fluorescent microscopy in orthotopic breast cancer xenografts | None |
| Derksen, 2011 (Netherlands) | Experimental | Development of a preclinical model for breast carcinomatosis | 86 | Transgenic mice model and orthotopic breast cancer xenografts | None |
| Diagnosis (N=2) | |||||
| Noh, 2012 (Korea) | Experimental | Diagnostic precision of MMP-2 and MMP-9 in ascites and pleural effusions in metastatic breast cancer | 36 | Chemiluminescent enzyme immunoassay on body fluids for CEA detection; Zymography and ELISA for matrix metalloproteinase | Patients heterogeneity; Retrospective study; Small sample size; Arbitrarily defined cut-off levels. |
| De Mattos-Arruda, 2014 (USA) | Proof-of-concept study | Use of targeted massively parallel sequencing to determine the origin of abdominal metastases | 1 | Targeted capture massively parallel sequencing | Only one patient; Lack of generalizability due to BRCA1 mutation. |
| Prognosis and treatment (N=10) | |||||
| Bertozzi, 2015 (Italy) | Cohort study | Prognosis of breast cancer patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis compared to other metastatic sites | 289 | Retrospective patients’ charts review | None |
| Flanagan, 2018 (Ireland) | Cohort study | Prognosis of patients with peritoneal metastases from extra-abdominal primary tumors | 543 | Retrospective patients’ charts review | Missed cases due to under-reporting and due to the inclusion of hospitalized patients only. |
| Tuthill, 2009 (United Kingdom) | Cohort study | Management and prognosis of patients with peritoneal metastases from breast cancer | 44 | Retrospective patients’ charts review | Small sample size; Heterogeneity in treatment modalities. |
| Abu-Rustum, 1997 (USA) | Cohort study | Outcomes of surgical management in patients with breast cancer carcinomatosis | 40 | Retrospective patients’ charts review | None |
| Eitan, 2003 (USA) | Cohort study | Role of surgical resection in patients breast cancer metastases to the abdomen and pelvis | 59 | Retrospective patients’ charts review | None |
| Garg, 2005 (USA) | Cohort study | Etiology, predictive features of peritoneal carcinomatosis and prognosis of cytoreduction | 79 | Retrospective patients’ charts review | Selection bias; Incomplete clinical data due to the retrospective design; Evolution in treatment over time; Completeness of surgical resection is subjective. |
| Cardi, 2015 (Italy) | Cohort study | Cytoreduction and HIPEC in patients with peritoneal metastases from rare primary tumors | 27 | Retrospective patients’ charts review | None |
| Cardi, 2013 (Italy) | Case series | Outcomes of HIPEC in peritoneal metastases | 5 | Retrospective patients’ charts review | None |
| McLemore, 2005 (USA) | Cohort study | Treatment outcomes in patients with gastrointestinal and peritoneal metastases from breast cancer | 73 | Retrospective patients’ charts review | Article only includes women with pathology proven metastases. |
| Gusani, 2008 (USA) | Cohort study | Morbidity and mortality of HIPEC and cytoreduction in peritoneal carcinomatosis from different cancer types | 122 | Retrospective patients’ charts review | None |
Figure 2Number of included studies per year and places of publication
Figure 3Proportion of patients with peritoneal or gastrointestinal metastases in the included studies
Proof-of-concept study and experimental studies were excluded.
Clinical data used to establish the diagnosis of peritoneal metastases in included cohort studies
In studies with several diagnostic criteria, the criteria were used alternatively.
[5-11], [16-25]
| Author | Pathology | Abdominal computed tomography criteria | Clinical file | |||||
| Biopsy | Cytology | Surgery | Not specified | Ascites | Peritoneal lesion | Omental lesion | ||
| Lamovec J et al. | X | |||||||
| Antic T et al. | X | |||||||
| Jain S et al. | X | X | X | |||||
| Inoue M et al. | X | X | ||||||
| Winston C B et al. | X | |||||||
| DiPiro P J et al. | X | X | X | |||||
| Kennecke H et al. | X | X | X | |||||
| Bertozzi S et al. | X | X | ||||||
| Flanagan M et al. | X | X | X | |||||
| Tuthill M et al. | X | |||||||
| Abu-Rustum NR et al. | X | |||||||
| Eitan R et al. | X | |||||||
| Garg R et al. | X | |||||||
| Cardi M et al. | X | |||||||
| McLemore EC et al. | X | X | ||||||
| Gusani NJ et al. | X | X | X | |||||
Summary of main findings
ILC: invasive lobular carcinoma; HIPEC: hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy
| Key findings |
| ILC, high tumor grade and loco-regional involvement are associated with peritoneal metastases. |
| HER2-enriched, luminal B and basal-like tumors have a greater propensity to spread to the peritoneum. |
| Findings in othotopic xenografts suggest a role for somatic loss of p53 and E-cadherin in the development of breast cancer peritoneal metastases. |
| There is variability in the definition and diagnostic criteria used for breast cancer peritoneal metastases including the presence of ascites, positive ascites cytology and peritoneal lesions on CT. |
| Studies evaluating the role of surgery are mainly small and retrospective. |
| Cytoreduction and HIPEC demonstrated encouraging results in small cohorts. Larger and more robust studies are needed in order to determine their impact on breast cancer-specific survival. |
| Studies suggest a role for palliative cytoreductive surgery in selected patients when there is minimal or no residual disease. |
PubMed and Web of Science search strategies
| Targeted records | Concept | ||||||
| Database | Year | Type | Language | Breast cancer | Metastases | Treatment | Restriction |
| PubMed | All | All | All | Breast cancer; OR breast carcinoma. | Peritoneal metastases | None | None |
| Web of Science | 1990–2019 | Articles | English | Breast cancer; OR breast carcinoma. | Peritoneal metastases; OR carcinomatosis; OR peritoneal spread; OR abdominal metastases. | Hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy; OR HIPEC; OR debulking; OR cytoreductive surgery. | NOT children |