Author/Authors :
Ali Assarian, A Department of Surgery - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Elahi, Ahmad Department of Surgery - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran
Abstract :
Background: Contralateral axillary metastasis (CAM) is a rare entity in patients
with breast cancer which can occur during the primary breast cancer or its follow-up.
Different treatment modalities include surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy, but
there is no agreement on them. In our review,we found 12 series with available data, 82
patients with synchronous or metachronous contralateral axillary node involvement
with no primary cancer in the contralateral breast.
Case Presentation: Our patient was a 50-year-old woman who presented with
locally advanced right breast cancer with no distant metastasis. After treatment
including neoadjuvant chemotherapy, MRM, and radiotherapy, her contralateral
axillary lymph node was involved with metastatic carcinoma compatible with ductal
carcinoma of the breast with similar IHC results. Evaluation of the contralateral breast
was negative for occult lesions and metastatic workups were negative for malignancy.
We assumed this presentation as aCAMand planned the treatment accordingly.
Conclusion: CAM without systemic metastasis might be considered a regional
disease because in many cases the spread is lymphatic and not hematogenous.The new
concept of lymphatic invasion instead of hematogenous spread has changed the intent
of palliative to curative treatment. According to our study, CAMpatients were mostly
managed with chemotherapy (96%), ALND (45%), contralateral breast and axillary
radiation (35%). The prognosis ofCAMis usually poor with a high relapse rate (>60%)
and a mortality rate of 15% in our review after 14-43 months follow-up, but it is better
than the prognosis of the patients with systemic metastasis.