Background
Metaplastic carcinoma of the breast consists of both invasive ductal carcinoma and metaplastic carcinoma. This rare subtype of cancer has a poor prognosis. The development of metaplastic breast cancer and relationship with BRCA1 are not well known. Here, we report a rare case of germline BRCA1 mutation-positive breast cancer with chondroid metaplasia.
Case presentation
A 39-year-old Japanese woman with a family history of breast cancer in her mother and ovarian cancer in her maternal grandmother consulted at our hospital with a left breast mass. Needle biopsy for the mass was performed, leading to a diagnosis of invasive breast cancer with chondroid metaplasia. We performed left mastectomy + sentinel lymph node biopsy + tissue expander insertion and replaced with a silicone implant later. Pathological examination revealed that the patient had triple-negative breast cancer. Four courses of doxorubicin+ cyclophosphamide therapy were performed as adjuvant therapy after surgery. We performed genetic counseling and genetic testing, and the results suggested the germline BRCA1 mutation 307 T> A (L63*). She has currently lived without a relapse for 2 years post-surgery.
Conclusions
There have been only 6 cases of metaplastic breast carcinoma with germline BRCA1 mutations including our case. Patients with BRCA1 mutations may develop basal-like subtypes or M type of triple-negative breast cancer besides metaplastic breast cancers.
A 34-year-old woman with a rapidly growing right breast mass visited our hospital. The mass was diagnosed as a right breast cancer (cT3N1M0 stage ⦀A). Her serum leucocyte count and C-reactive protein levels were high, and she had persistent fever. However, serum procalcitonin and β-D-glucan levels were normal, and no apparent infection focus was detected, although her serum granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) level was markedly elevated to 42.7 pg/mL. Therefore, a G-CSF-producing breast cancer was suspected. A pathological analysis of the surgical specimen revealed a squamous cell carcinoma of the breast (pT2N0 [i+] M0 stage ∥A). Right mastectomy (with the resection of the pectoralis major muscle), axillary lymph node dissection, and split layer grafting were performed. The leucocyte count and serum G-CSF level decreased on postoperative day (POD) 1 and normalized on POD 6. As adjuvant chemotherapy, 4 cycles of a combination chemotherapy with adriamycin and cyclophosphamide and 12 cycles of weekly paclitaxel were administered. After chemotherapy, the patient also underwent postmastectomy radiotherapy. Currently, 30 months after surgery, the patient is alive and well with neither progression nor distant metastasis. G-CSF-producing breast cancers tend to rapidly grow such as in the current case; thus, surgery should be performed immediately, followed by appropriate adjuvant treatment.
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