Page 26 - Delaware Medical Journal - October 2017
P. 26

Triple Negative Invasive Ductal
Carcinoma Arising in a Breast Cyst
 Sarah Himmelstein, MD; Emily Penman, MD FIGURE 1
Intracystic breast cancer is uncommon, comprising less than 1 percent of all malignant breast cancers. Classically, intracystic cancer is of papillary histologic subtype and is estrogen receptor positive.
We report on the case of a patient who was found to have invasive ductal carcinoma of
a cyst wall, which was found
to be estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor and Her-2 negative. This presented a unique management challenge as there have been no previously reported cases with discussion of treatment in the literature. The subsequent multidisciplinary approach to this patient’s care is discussed.
FIGURE 2
CASE PRESENTATION
The patient is a 70-year-old Caucasian female who initially presented to her primary care physician with a mass
in the right breast. She had a complex past medical history including a ruptured intracranial aneurysm in 1980 with resultant left hemiparesis and chronic headaches. Her past surgical history included bilateral reduction mammoplasty as well as a biopsy of her right breast in 2011 that proved
to be fat necrosis. Physical exam was

overlying skin that measured 6 cm at the 1 o’clock position, 3 cm from the nipple.
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Del Med J | October 2017 | Vol. 89 | No. 10
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