Background: The causes and pathologic and prognostic phenotypes of late-onset familial breast cancers are still unknown. The purpose of this study was to document the clinicopathological features of late-onset familial breast cancers using genetic testing of BRCA1 and BRCA2.
Methods: We analyzed 11 breast cancers from 10 patients from 8 Japanese late-onset Breast cancer families.
Background: There are few data regarding the biological characteristics of apocrine breast carcinoma in the literature due to its rarity and controversy over its definition. We analyzed the histopathological characteristics and tumor biology of apocrine breast carcinomas with regard to histological grade, p53, HER2, bcl-2, MIB-1 and hormone receptor status.
Patients And Methods: A consecutive series of 24 female apocrine breast carcinoma patients were the primary source of these retrospective data.
We present a very rare case of nodular mucinosis of the breast. A 30-year-old woman noticed a right breast lump and consulted at our hospital because it gradually increased in size. On physical examination, the lump was 30 x 25 mm in size, and was located in the upper outer quadrant close to the nipple of the right breast.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report an extremely rare case of the colocalization of a tubular adenoma and an invasive ductal carcinoma occurring in a 55-year-old woman. Following radiographical evaluation, fine-needle aspiration cytology of the left breast tumor was undertaken. Because cytological examination revealed malignancy, a partial mastectomy was performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: We investigated histopathological background and multicentricity in patients with familial breast cancers (FBCs) in comparison with these features in patients with sporadic breast cancers (SBCs), stratifying patients by menopausal status.
Methods: We collected a consecutive series of 469 FBC patients and 3334 SBC patients treated at our hospital between 1965 and 1995. The following criteria were used to define FBC, regardless of the presence or absence of a family history of other cancer or the patient's past history of malignancies: (1) Three or more second-degree relatives had been affected by breast cancer; (2) two first-degree relatives had been affected by breast cancer, and either one of them was under 40 years of age and/or had had bilateral breast cancers.