The radiological appearances of invasive cribriform carcinoma of the breast

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Abstract

Invasive cribriform carcinoma (ICC) of the breast is characterized by a cribriform histological architecture. It is rare, accounting for 0.6% of breast cancers in Nottingham and has an excellent prognosis. Its radiological features have not been previously described. Preoperative mammograms were available in eight cases (6 symptomatic, 2 screen-detected) and preoperative ultrasound examinations in four. The tumour was mammographically occult in four (50%) cases. The four tumours which were visible on mammography all showed as a large (20–35 mm) spiculated mass and two contained a few flecks of punctate calcification. The ultrasound appearances were not entirely typical of breast carcinoma. Three of four showed an ill-defined, inhomogeneous solid mass, but without the distal acoustic attenuation found in 60–97% of other forms of breast carcinoma. We conclude that ICC has imaging characteristics distinct from tubular carcinoma, which is its closest histological analogue. © 1994, All rights reserved.

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Stutz, J. A., Evans, A. J., Pinder, S., Ellis, I. O., Yeoman, L. J., Wilson, A. R. M., … Robertson, J. F. R. (1994). The radiological appearances of invasive cribriform carcinoma of the breast. Clinical Radiology, 49(10), 693–695. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0009-9260(05)82662-5

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