Abstract
e13558Background: Breast intraductal papilloma comprises a wide spectrum of lesions, ranging from benign intraductal papilloma to papilloma with foci of atypia or papillary carcinoma, it can harbor...
Highlights
An intraductal papilloma is a benign, or noncancerous breast tumor which originated from the epithelium of mammary ducts that forms in a milk duct
Coexisting atypical hyperplasia correlated with nipple discharge but not palpable mass, mammographic distortion or intraductal hypoechoic upon ultrasound
The coexisting atypia hyperplasia was related to abnormality upon ultrasound or microcalcification compared with the benign lesions
Summary
An intraductal papilloma is a benign, or noncancerous breast tumor which originated from the epithelium of mammary ducts that forms in a milk duct. The symptoms, clinical signs and supersonical appearances widely differ. These lesions may present clinically either as ultrasound abnormalities or palpable breast masses, with or without nipple discharge. Central papilloma originates from large ducts, often accompanied by pathological nipple discharge, while most peripheral papillomas occur in TDLU, involving small ducts. The management of benign intraductal papilloma remains controversial because of its nonspecific clinical findings, as well as its association with surrounding malignant pathology [5,6,7]. Our study aimed to address intraductal breast papilloma and its coexisting lesions. The aim of this study is to investigate the intraductal breast papilloma and its coexisting lesions retrospectively in real-world practice
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