Histiocytoid breast carcinoma: histological, immunohistochemical, ultrastructural, cytological and clinicopathological studies.
Кључне речи
Апстрактан
Histiocytoid breast carcinoma (HBC) is a rare variant of breast carcinoma and often causes a diagnostic dilemma because of its histological similarities to some types of breast cancer and benign lesions. To elucidate the incidence of HBC and its biological properties, histological specimens from 1010 breast cancer patients treated at Yokohama Minami Kyosai Hospital between 1972 and 1996 were reviewed. Three cases of pure HBC and three cases of combined HBC (two with pleomorphic lobular carcinoma and one with apocrine ductal carcinoma) were found, yielding an incidence of 0.3% for each. Two of the three pure HBC cases contained foci of in situ lobular carcinoma. Targetoid and Indian file invasive patterns, the features characteristic of lobular carcinoma, were present in all three pure HBC cases and in two of the three combined HBC with pleomorphic lobular carcinoma. These results, together with those of previous studies, suggested that the majority of HBC are of lobular origin, although the apocrine ductal origin is also possible in a small number of HBC. Diastase-resistant periodic acid-Schiff-positive granules and granular immunoreactivities for gross cystic disease fluid protein-15 (GCDFP-15) were characteristic of the histiocytoid tumor cells in both the pure and combined HBC, suggesting the apocrine differentiation of tumor cells. All three pure HBC cases were in stage 1 and were free of the disease for up to 5 years and 1 month after the lumpectomy. Thus, the prognosis of HBC appears to be dependent on the stage of the disease and may not always be poor, as indicated by the original report mentioning a preferential eyelid metastasis.