Invasive Cancer Confined to the Nipple of the Conserved Breast: A Case Report

Invasive breast cancer deriving from the milk duct and lobule that develops in the nipple is extremely rare, except in Paget’s disease and skin cancer. This is the second reported case of the development of invasive cancer confined to the nipple after breast-conserving surgery. A 69-year-old woman v...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Miyuki Kitahara, Yasuo Hozumi, Naoto Takeuchi, Satoko Ichinohe, Mitsuki Machinaga, Tatsuo Iijima
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Karger Publishers 2020-09-01
Series:Case Reports in Oncology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/510309
id doaj-75b2bfbb31af4a98b5b555181a929f2b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-75b2bfbb31af4a98b5b555181a929f2b2020-11-25T03:53:25ZengKarger PublishersCase Reports in Oncology1662-65752020-09-011331125113010.1159/000510309510309Invasive Cancer Confined to the Nipple of the Conserved Breast: A Case ReportMiyuki KitaharaYasuo HozumiNaoto TakeuchiSatoko IchinoheMitsuki MachinagaTatsuo IijimaInvasive breast cancer deriving from the milk duct and lobule that develops in the nipple is extremely rare, except in Paget’s disease and skin cancer. This is the second reported case of the development of invasive cancer confined to the nipple after breast-conserving surgery. A 69-year-old woman visited our department due to redness, swelling, and bloody discharge of the right nipple in the last month. A needle biopsy was suggestive of invasive ductal carcinoma; we performed a removal surgery of the right residual breast tissue and a second sentinel lymph node biopsy. She underwent these procedures 10 years previously as well. Thus, we diagnosed the present lesion as a local recurrence, but it was unknown whether the lesion was a true recurrence or second cancer, namely, metachronal ipsilateral breast cancer. The present case helps promote awareness that invasive cancer rarely develops in the nipple after conserving surgery. Patients should be encouraged to visit a medical facility if experiencing skin changes and swelling of the nipple. Additionally, breast cancer patients must be carefully selected for breast-conserving surgery; failure to do so may later result in nipple-specific local recurrence.https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/510309breast-conserving surgeryinvasive breast cancernipplemetachronal ipsilateraltrue recurrence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miyuki Kitahara
Yasuo Hozumi
Naoto Takeuchi
Satoko Ichinohe
Mitsuki Machinaga
Tatsuo Iijima
spellingShingle Miyuki Kitahara
Yasuo Hozumi
Naoto Takeuchi
Satoko Ichinohe
Mitsuki Machinaga
Tatsuo Iijima
Invasive Cancer Confined to the Nipple of the Conserved Breast: A Case Report
Case Reports in Oncology
breast-conserving surgery
invasive breast cancer
nipple
metachronal ipsilateral
true recurrence
author_facet Miyuki Kitahara
Yasuo Hozumi
Naoto Takeuchi
Satoko Ichinohe
Mitsuki Machinaga
Tatsuo Iijima
author_sort Miyuki Kitahara
title Invasive Cancer Confined to the Nipple of the Conserved Breast: A Case Report
title_short Invasive Cancer Confined to the Nipple of the Conserved Breast: A Case Report
title_full Invasive Cancer Confined to the Nipple of the Conserved Breast: A Case Report
title_fullStr Invasive Cancer Confined to the Nipple of the Conserved Breast: A Case Report
title_full_unstemmed Invasive Cancer Confined to the Nipple of the Conserved Breast: A Case Report
title_sort invasive cancer confined to the nipple of the conserved breast: a case report
publisher Karger Publishers
series Case Reports in Oncology
issn 1662-6575
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Invasive breast cancer deriving from the milk duct and lobule that develops in the nipple is extremely rare, except in Paget’s disease and skin cancer. This is the second reported case of the development of invasive cancer confined to the nipple after breast-conserving surgery. A 69-year-old woman visited our department due to redness, swelling, and bloody discharge of the right nipple in the last month. A needle biopsy was suggestive of invasive ductal carcinoma; we performed a removal surgery of the right residual breast tissue and a second sentinel lymph node biopsy. She underwent these procedures 10 years previously as well. Thus, we diagnosed the present lesion as a local recurrence, but it was unknown whether the lesion was a true recurrence or second cancer, namely, metachronal ipsilateral breast cancer. The present case helps promote awareness that invasive cancer rarely develops in the nipple after conserving surgery. Patients should be encouraged to visit a medical facility if experiencing skin changes and swelling of the nipple. Additionally, breast cancer patients must be carefully selected for breast-conserving surgery; failure to do so may later result in nipple-specific local recurrence.
topic breast-conserving surgery
invasive breast cancer
nipple
metachronal ipsilateral
true recurrence
url https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/510309
work_keys_str_mv AT miyukikitahara invasivecancerconfinedtothenippleoftheconservedbreastacasereport
AT yasuohozumi invasivecancerconfinedtothenippleoftheconservedbreastacasereport
AT naototakeuchi invasivecancerconfinedtothenippleoftheconservedbreastacasereport
AT satokoichinohe invasivecancerconfinedtothenippleoftheconservedbreastacasereport
AT mitsukimachinaga invasivecancerconfinedtothenippleoftheconservedbreastacasereport
AT tatsuoiijima invasivecancerconfinedtothenippleoftheconservedbreastacasereport
_version_ 1724478103339663360