When Something Seems Amiss: Radiology-Pathology Correlation of Metaplastic Breast Cancer

2020 
Metaplastic breast cancer is difficult to diagnose, resistant to conventional treatment, and biologically aggressive. A suspicious timeline and discordance between imaging findings and histopathologic tissue diagnosis should trigger additional workup. New, large lesions or rapidly growing lesions with complex echogenicity on ultrasound warrant correlation with image-guided biopsy for a definitive diagnosis. Lesions that appear aggressive on imaging, with negative biopsy findings, may represent false negatives due to sampling bias from intratumoral heterogeneity. In such cases, it may be advisable to obtain an excisional biopsy. These tumors are known to progress even with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Immunotherapy, however, may be effective even for metastatic disease. A multidisciplinary approach and a high index of suspicion may, therefore, confer survival benefits in circumstances where the imaging phenotype does not fit with the timeline or pathologic diagnosis. This report describes five cases of metaplastic breast cancer diagnosed at our institution to highlight the importance of a timely and accurate diagnosis of this rare but aggressive breast malignancy.
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