Title of article
Patterns of clinical metastasis in breast cancer: an analysis of 100 patients
Author/Authors
N.J. Carty، نويسنده , , A. Foggitt، نويسنده , , C.R. Hamilton، نويسنده , , G.T. Royle، نويسنده , , MARTIN I. TAYLOR، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Pages
2
From page
607
To page
608
Abstract
Many patients diagnosed with breast cancer will develop metastases and these have diverse presentations. We have reviewed 100 consecutive patients who have died with metastatic breast cancer, to determine the frequency, sites and mode of presentation of recurrent disease. The commonest site of failure was loco-regional (n = 61), this usually presented with a mass, but a minority of patients also complained of pain. Bone metastases developed in 60 patients and produced bone pain, pathological fracture (n = 6) or cord compression (n = 5). Pulmonary metastases producing shortness of breath were diagnosed in 34 patients and were asymptomatic in a further 10. Intra-abdominal metastases were found at some time in 23 patients, most commonly in the liver (n = 20) and the majority complained of epigastric pain (n = 17). Brain metastases occurred in 23 patients and produced a wide range of symptoms including those of a space-occupying lesion (n = 10), cranial nerve palsy (n = 7), diabetes insipidus (n = 3), focal limb weakness (n = 2) and meningitis (n = 1). Three patients had choroid metastases producing reduced visual acuity. Recurrent breast carcinoma can present in a variety of ways, therefore any new symptom or sign should be considered to represent recurrence until proved otherwise.
Keywords
breast cancer , metastasis
Journal title
European Journal of Surgical Oncology
Serial Year
1995
Journal title
European Journal of Surgical Oncology
Record number
509592
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