Clinical significance of the sub-classification of 71 cases mucinous breast carcinoma

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Abstract

Objective: Mucinous breast carcinoma (MBC) is classified into mixed mucinous breast carcinoma (MMBC) and pure mucinous breast carcinoma (PMBC) based on whether the tumor is with or without a component of invasive ductal carcinoma, respectively. PMBC is subtyped into hypocellular PMBC (PMBC-A) and hypercellular PMBC (PMBC-B). Methods: Of 1,760 primary breast carcinomas, 71 were diagnosed as MBC, and were subtyped for comparison purposes. Results: Seventy-one of all breast cancers (4.0%) were MBC, and consisted of 23 MMBC, 32 PMBC-A and 16 PMBC-B. The MBC tumors were more often hormone receptor-positive and HER2-negative than non-MBC tumors. Patients with MMBC, PMBC-B or PMBC-A, in this order, had significantly higher recurrence rates than non-MBC cases (p=0.006, log-rank). Conclusions: In the NCCN guidelines, MBC is also regarded as "a histological type with a favorable prognosis" in a uniform manner, and "treatment for a histological type with a favorable prognosis" is recommended. However, the results of this study suggest that sub-classification-based, individualized therapeutic strategies should be considered. © 2013 Kashiwagi et al.

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Kashiwagi, S., Onoda, N., Asano, Y., Noda, S., Kawajiri, H., Takashima, T., … Hirakawa, K. (2013). Clinical significance of the sub-classification of 71 cases mucinous breast carcinoma. SpringerPlus, 2(1), 1–6. https://doi.org/10.1186/2193-1801-2-481

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