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Prognosis of dermal lymphatic invasion with or without clinical signs of inflammatory breast cancer
Author(s) -
Gruber Guenther,
Ciriolo Michele,
Altermatt Hans Joerg,
Aebi Stefan,
Berclaz Gilles,
Greiner Richard H.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.11684
Subject(s) - medicine , breast cancer , lymphatic system , cancer , inflammatory breast cancer , disease , lymphovascular invasion , localized disease , gastroenterology , adjuvant therapy , oncology , pathology , surgery , metastasis , prostate cancer
It is still an open debate whether tumor emboli in dermal lymphatics without inflammatory signs represent a similar bad prognosis like inflammatory breast cancer. We evaluated the prognostic role of dermal lymphatic invasion (DLI) in breast cancer with (DLI + ID) or without (DLI w/o ID) inflammatory disease (ID). From August 1988 to January 2000, 42 patients with DLI were irradiated. Twenty‐five were classified as pT4, 13 out of them as pT4d (inflammatory disease); the 17 remaining patients had 1 T1c, 12 T2 and 4 T3 cancers with DLI. Axillary dissection revealed node‐positive disease in 39/41 patients (median, 9 positive nodes). Thirty‐eight out of 42 patients received adjuvant systemic treatment(s). After a mean follow‐up of 33 months, 22/42 patients (52%) are disease‐free. The actuarial 3‐year disease‐free survival is 50% (DLI w/o ID, 61%; DLI + ID, 31%; p < 0.03); the corresponding overall survival was 69% (DLI w/o ID, 87%; DLI + ID, 37%; p = 0.005). The presence or absence of ID was the only significant parameter for all endpoints in multivariate analyses. Dissemination occurred in 19 (45%), local relapse in 7 ( n = 17%) and regional failure in 4 (10%). Nine patients (21%) had contralateral breast cancer/relapse. Despite the same histopathologic presentation, DLI w/o ID offered a significantly better disease‐free survival and overall survival than ID. The finding of dermal lymphatic tumor invasion predicts a high probability for node‐positive disease. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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