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Spontaneous Regression And Resolution Of Breast Implant- Associated Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma: Implications For Research, Diagnosis And Clinical Management

Fleming et al., 2018Lymphoma

Fleming, D., Stone, J., & Tansley, P. (2018). spontaneous Regression and Resolution of Breast Implant-Associated Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma: Implications for Research, Diagnosis and Clinical Management. Aesthetic plastic surgery, 42(3), 672–678. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00266-017-1064-z

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Abstract

BackgroundFirst described in 1997, breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma (BIA-ALCL) was recognised by the World Health Organisation in 2016 as a specific disease. It typically presents as a late seroma-containing atypical, monoclonal T cells which are CD30+ and anaplastic lymphoma kinase negative. Until recently, it was thought that the disease was very rare. However, it is being diagnosed increasingly frequently with 56 cases confirmed in Australia by September 2017 and the estimated incidence revised from 1 in 300,000 to between 1 in 1000 and 1 in 10,000 patients with bilateral implants. There is debate about the spectrum of BIA-ALCL. According to the current WHO classification, BIA-ALCL is a cancer in all cases. Treatment guidelines require that it is treated urgently with a minimum of bilateral removal of implants and capsulectomies. Whilst acknowledging the disease has been under diagnosed in the past, with some notable exceptions the BIA-ALCL literature has given scant attention to the epidemiological evidence. Now that it is known that the disease may occur in up to 1 in 1000 patients with a median of 7.5 years from implantation to diagnosis, understanding it in its epidemiological context is imperative. The epidemiology of cancer and lymphoma in women with breast implants strongly suggests that most patients do not have a cancer that will inevitably progress without treatment but instead a self-limiting lympho-proliferative disorder. Although the possibility of spontaneous regression has been raised and the observation made that treatment delay did not seem to increase the risk of spread, the main objection to the lympho-proliferative hypothesis has been the lack of documented cases of spontaneous regression or resolution. Because all cases currently are considered malignant and treated urgently, only case report evidence, interpreted in the proper epidemiological context, is likely to be available to challenge this thinking.Methods and ResultsNew observations and interpretation of the epidemiology of BIA-ALCL are made. These are supported by the presentation of two cases, which to the best of our knowledge comprise the first documented evidence of spontaneous regression and spontaneous resolution of confirmed BIA-ALCL.ConclusionsThe epidemiology of the disease strongly suggests that the vast majority of cases are not a cancer that will inevitably progress without treatment. The findings presented in the manuscript provide supportive clinical evidence. Consequently, an alternative view of BIA-ALCL with implications for research, diagnosis and clinical management needs to be considered.Level of Evidence IVThis journal requires that authors assign a level of evidence to each article. For a full description of these Evidence-Based Medicine ratings, please refer to the Table of Contents or the online Instructions to Authors www.springer.com/00266.

Case Details

Disease Location

Left breast

Personal Characteristics

24 -year-old female she had an uncomplicated primary breast augmentation with silimed polyurethane foam-covered silicone gel filled implants in submuscular pockets in may 2013

Clinical Characteristics

Breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma (bia-alcl) in february 2017, patient complained of a sudden enlargement of her left breast ultrasound reported a seroma with an estimated volume of 50cc aspiration was performed 10 days later, the estimated volume was again 50cc but a total of 80cc was drained cytology and ihc confirmed bia-alcl with atypical t cells which were CD30+ she underwent bilateral explantation and capsulectomies on 5th of may, 2017, 10 weeks after her onset of symptoms

Remission Characteristics

Cytology, flow cytometry and ihc of a small residual fluid collection, and histopathology of the capsule showed no evidence of malignancy PET scan on 5th of july, 2017 was normal and the patient was aympatientomatic

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

No major mechanism proposed

Clinical Treatment

Breast implant explanation and capsulectomy

Non-Clinical Treatment

None reported