Abstract

Reports of breast cancer in adolescent females consist mostly of isolated patients. Because of this, neither the prognosis nor optimal management of the disease in this age group is clear. The authors retrospectively reviewed their 40-year single-institution experience of all patients under 20 years of age who were referred for treatment of newly diagnosed breast cancer. The charts of 16 patients, all females (age range, 13 to 19 years), were reviewed. Four patients found to have cytosarcoma phyllodes and two with tumors metastatic to the breast were excluded from further study. Ten patients had various forms of adenocarcinoma of the breast, including invasive intraductal, invasive lobular, signet ring, and secretory adenocarcinoma. Four had a family history of breast cancer. The average time from onset of symptoms to diagnosis was 3.7 months. Mammography failed to diagnose cancer in any of the four patients tested, including one with an 8-cm mass. Two patients had stage I tumors, four had stage IIA, two had stage IIIA, and two had stage IV. The patients were treated with combinations of surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy. One stage I patient (with bilateral breast cancer) died of radiation-induced sarcoma after treatment; the other stage I patient is alive without disease 15 years after treatment. The 5-year survival rate for stage IIA patients was 50%; that for patients with stage IIIA or IV was 0%. Five of the 10 patients presented during the past 10 years. This study constitutes the largest single institution experience with adolescent breast cancer. Adenocarcinoma of the breast, although rare, does occur in adolescent females and must be considered in the differential diagnosis of breast masses in this age group. Appropriate evaluation may necessitate biopsy because mammography can be unreliable. The outcome for our patients suggests that the prognosis of advanced-stage breast cancer in adolescents may be at least as ominous as that in adult patients. Since several advanced-stage patients presented with large (<5 cm) tumors or had a long delay (up to 13 months) between onset of symptoms and diagnosis, thorough evaluation of a breast mass in an adolescent female should not be postponed.

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