Cytotoxic-mediated Spontaneous Regression Of Inflammatory Cutaneous Metastases Of Breast Carcinoma
Tomasini C. (2020). Cytotoxic-mediated spontaneous regression of inflammatory cutaneous metastases of breast carcinoma. Journal of cutaneous pathology, 47(8), 758–763. https://doi.org/10.1111/cup.13694
View Original Source →Abstract
Spontaneous regression (SR) of cancer is a rare but well-documented biological phenomenon, which is even rarer in the context of metastatic breast carcinoma. Different mechanisms of SR are still under debate, including immune-mediated response. We herein report a case of the SR of intralymphatic cutaneous metastases of a breast carcinoma with spontaneously-induced T-cell-mediated cytotoxic response. An 86-year-old female was diagnosed with locally advanced right breast carcinoma and axillary lymph node metastases, without distant metastases The patient refused any therapy. Six months afterwards, she developed multiple, asymptomatic purpura-like plaques with prominent teleangectasias on her right chest wall, continuous to the previous surgical scar and on her ipsilateral abdomen. Skin biopsy showed aggregates of atypical cells admixed with erythrocyte thrombi within dilated dermal lymphatic vessels. SR of the cutaneous lesions occurred within 6 months and persisted at the 15 months follow-up in the absence of therapy, whilst no signs of internal relapse were observed. Immunohistochemically, the estrogen-negative, CK7-positive, C-erb B2-positive intralymphatic metastases were associated with extensive infiltration of CD8-positive cytototoxic T lymphocytes. Factors that may have precluded the implantation of intralymphatic metastases leading to SR are discussed, with local immune surveillance being one major hypothesis.
Case Details
Disease Location
Skin
Personal Characteristics
86-year-old woman
Clinical Characteristics
Diagnosed with right breast carcinoma and had radical mastectomy and axillary dissection. Histopathology showed a grade 3, poorly differentiated, estrogen (er)-negative, cytokeratin 7 (ck7) and c-erb b2-positive, invasive ductal carcinoma with metastasis to 2/20 of right axillary lymph nodes (ct4 cn1 cm0). Six months later she consulted with multiple, large, asymptomatic erythematous-violaceous plaques with telangiectasias on her right chest wall, continuous with the previous surgical scar and on her ipsilateral abdomen. The skin surrounding the plaques, especially the abdomen, was edematous with dimpling pits (peau d'orange) a biopsy specimen from a chest wall plaque revealed an increased number of dilated lymphatic vessels, throughout the dermis, containing solid aggregates of atypical cells admixed with erythrocytes and surrounded by a dense inflammatory infiltrate. Neoplastic cells and erythrocytes had aggregated and occluded the vessels, forming multiple intravascular thrombi. The neoplastic cells were positive for ck7, ki-67, and c-erb b2 but negative for estrogen and progesterone receptors. A diagnosis of inflammatory metastatic breast carcinoma was made.
Remission Characteristics
The cutaneous plaques were gradually fading at the 3 months follow-up and had completely disappeared at 6 months. A biopsy specimen from a regressed plaque on the abdomen revealed diffusely sclerotic dermis with haphazardly arranged coarse collagen bundles and increased capillary-like vessels with inconspicuous lumina, surrounded by a scant inflammatory infiltrate.
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
Specific neoantigens expressed by the carcinoma cells may have been identi- fied by her immune system, leading to the mounting of an antitumor immune response.
Clinical Treatment
Biopsy
Non-Clinical Treatment
None reported