anaplastic large cell lymphoma associated with saline breast implant

Authors

grace ng department of surgery, school of community medicine, university of oklahoma, oklahoma, usa

rupa k. patel department of surgery, school of community medicine, university of oklahoma, oklahoma, usa

lanette smith breast surgery of tulsa, oklahoma, usa

guido sclabas department of surgery, school of community medicine, university of oklahoma, oklahoma, usa

abstract

background: breast implant associated anaplastic large t- cell lymphoma is a rare type of non-hodgkin lymphoma, with a reported incidence of 0.3% per 100,000 women with breast prosthesis per year. it presents most commonly as a peri-implant seroma, but may also present as a capsular mass, tumor erosion through skin, in a regional lymph node, or found incidentally during revision surgery. case presentation: we report a 68-year-old female patient who presented with a four month history of marked pain and swelling of the right breast, who upon implant removal and right sided capsulectomy, revealed pathology consistent with alk negative, cd 30 positive anaplastic large t- cell lymphoma. conclusion: breast implant associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma, although a rare clinical occurrence is of clinical significance. prognosis is favorable in the majority of reported cases. definitive treatment guidelines have yet to be determined after review of long-term follow-up data.

Sign up for free to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma Associated With Breast Implants

A forty two years old woman with a history of bilateral breast augmentation for cosmetic reasons was presented for poor healing of the surgical site. Tissue and periprosthetic fluid were removed from the wound site revealing an atypical lymphoid infiltrate. Subsequently the patient developed axillary lymph adenopathy. Excisional biopsy was performed. Flow cytometry was non-diagnostic. She conti...

full text

Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma Associated with Breast Implant: A Case Report

Primary breast lymphoma represents less than 1% of all primary breast malignancies and most primary breast lymphomas are of B-Cell origin. The association of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) negative anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL), a very rare form of primary breast lymphoma, with silicone-filled breast implants has been suggested and several case reports supported this proposal, especia...

full text

Breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma.

Anaplastic large cell lymphoma is a rare disease associated with breast implants. We present the case of a woman who had had breast augmentation and multiple revisions over a period of 13 years and presented with recurrent fluid collections. The cause was determined to be anaplastic large cell lymphoma, which required removal of the implants, capsulectomy, and evaluation by a medical oncologist...

full text

anaplastic large cell lymphoma associated with breast implants

a forty two years old woman with a history of bilateral breast augmentation for cosmetic reasons was presented for poor healing of the surgical site. tissue and periprosthetic fluid were removed from the wound site revealing an atypical lymphoid infiltrate. subsequently the patient developed axillary lymph adenopathy. excisional biopsy was performed. flow cytometry was non-diagnostic. she conti...

full text

anaplastic large cell lymphoma associated with breast implant: a case report

primary breast lymphoma represents less than 1% of all primary breast malignancies and most primary breast lymphomas are of b-cell origin. the association of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (alk) negative anaplastic large cell lymphoma (alcl), a very rare form of primary breast lymphoma, with silicone-filled breast implants has been suggested and several case reports supported this proposal, especia...

full text

Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma Associated With Breast Implants

A forty two years old woman with a history of bilateral breast augmentation for cosmetic reasons was presented for poor healing of the surgical site. Tissue and periprosthetic fluid were removed from the wound site revealing an atypical lymphoid infiltrate. Subsequently the patient developed axillary lymph adenopathy. Excisional biopsy was performed. Flow cytometry was non-diagnostic. She conti...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
archives of breast cancer

جلد ۳، شماره ۴، صفحات ۱۳۵-۱۳۸

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023