Differential diagnosis of primary mesenchymal neoplasms of the breast


Ozsen M., Polatkan S. A. V., Yalcinkaya U., TOLUNAY Ş., GÖKGÖZ M. Ş.

CLINICAL & TRANSLATIONAL ONCOLOGY, 2024 (SCI-Expanded) identifier identifier identifier

Abstract

ObjectiveWhile the majority of breast neoplasms originate from epithelial cells, a rare part of them originate from mesenchymal breast tissue.This study aims to present the histomorphological and clinicoradiological features of our series of primary mesenchymal breast tumors and to discuss the features of these tumors in light of the literature.ObjectiveWhile the majority of breast neoplasms originate from epithelial cells, a rare part of them originate from mesenchymal breast tissue.This study aims to present the histomorphological and clinicoradiological features of our series of primary mesenchymal breast tumors and to discuss the features of these tumors in light of the literature.Materials and methodsCases diagnosed as primary mesenchymal breast tumor in breast resection materials evaluated in our center between 2010 and 2023 were included.ResultsOf the 26 tumors included, 57.7% were diagnosed as benign and 42.3% as malignant mesenchymal tumor. Cases diagnosed as benign mesenchymal tumor were hemangioma, lipoma, extra-abdominal fibromatosis, leiomyoma, angiofibroma, lipomatosis, benign fibrous histiocytoma and granular cell tumor.Histopathological study results were compatible with angiosarcoma in 5 (45.4%), undifferentiated sarcoma in 3 (27.3%), myxofibrosarcoma in 2 (18.2%) cases and rhabdomyosarcoma in 1 (9.1%) case.ResultsOf the 26 tumors included, 57.7% were diagnosed as benign and 42.3% as malignant mesenchymal tumor. Cases diagnosed as benign mesenchymal tumor were hemangioma, lipoma, extra-abdominal fibromatosis, leiomyoma, angiofibroma, lipomatosis, benign fibrous histiocytoma and granular cell tumor.Histopathological study results were compatible with angiosarcoma in 5 (45.4%), undifferentiated sarcoma in 3 (27.3%), myxofibrosarcoma in 2 (18.2%) cases and rhabdomyosarcoma in 1 (9.1%) case.ConclusionPrimary breast sarcomas are rarely seen compared to benign mesenchymal tumors and constitute less than 0.1% of all malignant breast tumors. When histomorphological findings suggestive of a mesenchymal tumor are observed in breast specimens, sufficient sampling should be performed to exclude a possible phyllodes tumor, and clinicoradiological findings should be examined to exclude the possibility of a metastasis.