Background: There are no established guidelines for the management of apocrine carcinomas of the breast; they are treated as a non-specific type of breast cancer. Case Report: We report on the case of a 40-year-old man who developed primary mediastinal apocrine carcinoma overexpressing human epidermal growth factor-2 (HER2). The patient initially underwent complete resection of a mediastinal mature teratoma with a focal apocrine carcinoma component. Two years after surgery, relapse was detected in multiple mediastinal lymph nodes. He received induction chemotherapy including docetaxel, trastuzumab, and pertuzumab; consolidative concurrent chemoradiation was added after six cycles. A complete response was confirmed using computed tomography following this multimodal therapy. After chemoradiation, adjuvant trastuzumab and pertuzumab were administered for 1 year and the patient has since had no evidence of progressive disease. Conclusion: A multi-modal regimen that includes an anti-HER2 agent appears to be a promising treatment for patients with HER2-positive extramammary apocrine carcinoma.
CITATION STYLE
Sugiyama, K., Iwakoshi, A., Satoh, M., Shiraishi, K., Nozawa, K., Kogure, Y., … Saka, H. (2019). Primary Mediastinal HER2-positive Apocrine Carcinoma in Mature Teratoma Treated With Anti-HER2 Therapy and Chemoradiation. In Vivo, 33(2), 551–557. https://doi.org/10.21873/invivo.11509
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