Mammary liposarcoma is among the rarest of breast tumours. Here we report the presentation, macroscopic, microscopic, and immunohistochemical features of an extremely rare case of metaplastic carcinoma with extensive pleomorphic liposarcomatous differentiation. A 47-year-old woman presented with bilateral grade III breast ptosis and a 3 × 4 cm mass in the lower outer quadrant of the left breast. Mammography and ultrasound confirmed a well-defined mass. A core biopsy performed was diagnosed as pleomorphic liposarcoma. Microscopically, this was a well-defined, lobulated tumour comprising solid sheets of large pleomorphic and spindle cells with bizarre forms, vacuolated cytoplasm, and ample mitoses. Atypical lipoblasts were easily identifiable. Due to the strong, though patchy, cytokeratin expression, the diagnosis of metaplastic carcinoma with pleomorphic liposarcomatous differentiation was made. Extensive sampling, careful search for a biphasic pattern, ductal carcinoma in situ, and/or epithelial differentiation, and a panel of broad-spectrum cytokeratins are essential to establish the diagnosis.

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