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Home » Hematologic Malignancies » Leukemia and Lymphoma

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DERMCLINIC 

Intraductal Carcinoma Presenting as Enlarging Nipple

By Ted Rosen, MD | June 15, 2012
Dr Rosen is Professor of Dermatology at Baylor College of Medicine and Chief of the Dermatology Service at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, both in Houston, Texas.

Intraductal carcinoma was the cause of firmness and irregular enlargement of the nipple.

Intraductal carcinoma was the cause of firmness and irregular enlargement of the nipple.

A 67-year-old woman presented with the chief complaint of an enlarging left nipple. Neither nipple discharge nor spontaneous pain was noted.

Key point: The affected nipple appeared irregularly enlarged and was firm to palpation. Manipulation of the nipple elicited mild tenderness. No breast masses were detected. Because the differential diagnosis included mammary Paget disease, however, a mammogram was obtained. It showed an underlying a dense mass which, on fine-needle aspiration biopsy, demonstrated intraductal carcinoma.

Treatment: The patient was referred to a breast cancer clinic and offered the various appropriate therapeutic options. She chose mastectomy as monotherapy.

Note: Mastitis would be expected to be more painful/tender and is often associated with significant nipple discharge.

 

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