Background: The Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program with the National Cancer Institute tested whether population-based cancer registries can serve as honest brokers to acquire tissue and data in the SEER-Linked Virtual Tissue Repository (VTR) Pilot.
Methods: We collected formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue and clinical data from patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) and breast cancer (BC) for two studies comparing cancer cases with highly unusual survival (≥5 years for PDAC and ≤30 months for BC) to pair-matched controls with usual survival (≤2 years for PDAC and ≥5 years for BC). Success was defined as the ability for registries to acquire tissue and data on cancer cases with highly unusual outcomes.
We report the first case of distinct, synchronous serous carcinomas of the adnexa arising in a patient with a family history of breast and ovarian cancer and a germline loss of function mutation in BRCA1. Illustrating an exceedingly rare phenomenon of synchronous high-grade carcinomas with distinct histomorphologic, immunohistochemical and cytogenetic features, the case serves as a point of departure for the discussion of phenotypic patterns of carcinomas arising in BRCA1 mutation carriers. We also review patient management, including the importance of risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy in women with deleterious BRCA1 mutations, as well as the potential need for an intraoperative pathologic assessment to find occult, high-grade carcinomas in this setting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: A clinicopathologic study with an emphasis on tumor immunohistochemical profile is presented.
Methods: Sixty-one cases of male invasive breast cancers were studied. Median age of the cohort was 65 years.