82 research outputs found

    Secretory breast carcinoma with metastatic sentinel lymph node

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    BACKGROUND: Secretory mammary carcinoma is a rare breast neoplasia originally described in children but sometimes also found in adults. It presents a more favourable outcome than more common histological types of breast carcinoma; published literature in fact reports only a few cases with axillary lymph node metastases and only four cases with distant metastases. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: In this paper we report a rare case of secretory breast carcinoma with axillary lymph node metastases in a 33-year-old woman. To our knowledge, this is the first case of secretory carcinoma involving biopsy of the sentinel lymph node and investigation of the e-cadherin expression. We found positivity for e-cadherin, which would support the hypothesis that this type of tumour is a variant of the infiltrating ductal carcinoma. CONCLUSION: After a careful analysis of reported data, we have come to the conclusion that the treatment of choice for patients with secretory breast carcinoma should be conservative surgery with sentinel lymph node biopsy, followed by accurate follow-up. We are of the opinion that while post-operative radiotherapy is indicated in adult patients who have undergone quadrantectomy, it should not be used in children. Although several cases of secretory carcinoma have been treated with adjuvant chemotherapy, there are still no reliable data regarding the real value of such a choice

    Rhabdomyosarcoma: cytomorphology, subtyping and differential diagnostic dilemmas

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    To identify morphologic characteristics and architectural patterns of rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS), to attempt a subclassification from fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) smears and to point out some differential diagnostic problems. STUDY DESIGN: We reviewed all positive cytologic material from 53 patients with RMS whose diagnoses were histologically and/or immunocytochemically confirmed. We analyzed several morphologic features and identified architectural patterns of smears. RESULTS: Among alveolar RMS, we identified two major architectural patterns: one containing completely dissociated cells and one containing many chance formations. Among the embryonal type, the predominant architectural pattern contained large tissue fragments with abundant eosinophilic material and various numbers of dissociated cells. The pattern of only dissociated cells was similar to the one seen in the alveolar type. The relative proportion of poorly to better and well-differentiated rhabdomyoblasts varied in both types and in all patterns. CONCLUSION: RMS exhibits a variety of morphologic pictures regarding cellular morphology and architectural patterns, even within the same histologic subtype. Therefore, a reliable subclassification into alveolar and embryonal RMS cannot be made from FNAB smears. The embryonal type can be suggested in cases containing large tissue fragments with abundant eosinophilic material and small, tightly packed cells with oval nuclei. However, all cases suspected to be RMS must always be confirmed immunocytochemically since they could be confused with some benign and malignant tumors with similar morphology
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