[Pulmonary metastatic malignant phyllodes tumor showing multiple thin walled cavities].
Keywords
Coimriú
A 52-year-old woman who had undergone a partial mastectomy 1 year earlier because of benign phyllodes tumor was admitted because of dry cough and abnormal chest radiograph findings. Chest computed tomograms demonstrated multiple thin-walled cavities and nodules. Clinical examinations and transbronchial biopsy specimens failed to provide a conclusive diagnosis. However, the pulmonary thin-walled cavities enlarged, and a nodular shadow revealed cavitary formation. An open lung biopsy was performed to diagnose the pulmonary lesions. Although biopsy specimens disclosed the infiltration of poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma cells in pleura and pulmonary parenchyma, no primary site was detected. The patient did not respond to systemic chemotherapy (CDDP and VP-16), and died of respiratory failure due to advanced pulmonary metastasis. Autopsy demonstrated marked tumor invasion of the lungs, myocardium, and bone. We analyzed malignant cells in lung tissues at autopsy by immunohistochemistry, and found identical malignant cells in surgical samples obtained during the patients earlier mastectomy. A diagnosis of pulmonary metastasis from malignant phyllodes tumor of the breast was made. Thin walled cavitary lesions from malignant phyllodes tumor are rare; however, pulmonary metastasis of malignant phyllodes tumor should be considered one disease that exhibits thin-walled cavities as a radiographic manifestation.