Abstract

Primary breast lymphoma is a rare neoplasia, with little clinical and imaging specificity. These are essentially type B lymphomas, of which the most common is diffuse lymphoma with large B cells. It is an entity that presents a prognostic impact from the outset by their localization but also by the risk of neurological relapse. The treatment of primary breast lymphoma depends on lymphomatous localizations and of course the histological type. There remain some questions to be raised regarding the place of radiotherapy in the treatment of certain localized histological forms, as well as the interest of systematic neuromeningeal prophylaxis in this breast localization. We report a case of primary breast lymphoma in a 50-year-old patient with no particular history.

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