We report a case of a 43-yr-old woman with a granular cell tumor of the breast. She presented with a palpable mass of the left breast of 2-yr duration. On physical examination, a firm, painless, well-defined mass located at the union of the upper quadrants was observed and a palpable homolateral axillary lymph node. The tumor was dense with ill-defined borders at mammography and hypoechoic, hypovascular, and poorly limited at ultrasonography. Fine needle aspiration cytology of the lesion was performed. Cytologic examination revealed the presence of highly cellular material, composed of both large cohesive groups and single cells often admixed with connective tissue. These cells had ill-defined abundant granular cytoplasm and bland regular small nuclei. Nucleoli were inconspicuous. Neither mitoses nor necrosis were noted. The cytological diagnosis of granular cell tumor of the breast was confirmed by histological examination of the surgical specimen following a breast lumpectomy.
Metabolic imaging with F-18 fluorodeoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography is one of the most sensitive and non-invasive techniques, and has proved useful in melanoma. We designed, in 2004, at the Institute Gustave Roussy, a prospective study to determine the value of F-18 fluorodeoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography scanning in the detection of regional and/or distant metastasis in 25 new patients referred for the treatment of a primary melanoma thicker than 4 mm (tumor node metastases stage T4). The sentinel lymph node biopsy was proposed for all the patients without a palpable regional lymph node. Abnormal positron emission tomography scan findings were correlated to available histological data and to the course of the disease. The F-18 fluorodeoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography scan identified 0/2 intact primary melanomas, 1/4 residual primary melanomas after limited excision, 0/6 lymph node basins with micrometastasis, 4/4 lymph node basins with enlarged palpable lymph nodes and 0 distant metastasis. The sensitivity and specificity of positron emission tomography scans for microscopic lymph node disease in basins were, respectively, 0 and 92%. A false-positive F-18 fluorodeoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography result in a cervical basin led to a useless cervical lymph node dissection. In three patients, the positron emission tomography scan was positive in distant sites but none of these foci represented a true metastasis. In conclusion, it is not useful to include a positron emission tomography scan in the initial work-up of patients with primary melanoma, even in patients with thick primary melanomas (>4 mm). Sentinel lymph node biopsy remains the technique of choice for the most accurate initial staging.
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