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Diagnostic Pathology 2012
A comprehensive morphological study for basal-like breast carcinomas with comparison to nonbasal-like carcinomasKeywords: Basal-like breast carcinoma, Breast, Breast carcinoma, Morphology Abstract: Five hundred invasive breast carcinomas were reviewed for several morphological features and immunostained for oestrogen and progesterone receptors, c-ERB-B2, cytokeratin5/6, cytokeratin14, vimentin and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Basal-like breast carcinoma was defined as a triple negative tumor with cytokeratin5/6 and/or EGFR positive.The prevalance of BLBC was 9.6%. All medullary carcinomas and 55.6% of metaplastic carcinomas showed basal-like immunophenotype. Patients with BLBC were younger (p=0.04) and had higher-grade tumors (p<0.0001). Morphologic features associated with BLBC included increased mitosis, nuclear pleomorphism, presence of geographic and/or central necrosis, pushing margin of invasion and stromal lymphocytic response (p<0.0001). Presence of prominent nucleoli and vesicular nuclear chromatin were the cytological features correlated with basal-like phenotype (p<0.0001). On multivariate analyses, BLBCs were associated with high mitotic number (p<0.0001), the presence of vesicular chromatin (p=0.004), high tubular grade (p=0.011), lymphocytic response (p=0.031) and the absence of carcinoma insitu (p=0.039). Vimentin was positive in 53.2% of BLBCs, while cytokeratin14 was less frequently expressed (27.7%).BLBCs have some distinctive, but not pathognomonical, morphological features. Paying attention to these features and adding cytokeratin14 and vimentin to the immunohistochemical panel can help the definitive diagnosis of BLBCs.Http://www.diagnosticpathology.diagnomx.eu/vs/5962175467857400 webciteBreast cancer is the most frequent non-cutaneous neoplasia in women and second cause of death [1]. Breast carcinomas are heterogeneous disease such that they may have different prognoses and therapy responses despite similarities in histological types, grade and stage. Although there are 19 subtypes of breast carcinoma according to World Health Organization (WHO) 2003 classification [2], it does not entirely include the various clinical courses
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