Abstract

Estrogen receptor status, tumor histology, and the interval between the development of tumors were assessed in 99 patients with bilateral breast cancer. Tumors were first grouped into those simultaneously detected in both breasts or within 12 months of each other (synchronous bilateral breast cancer, of which there were 64) and second, those detected within more than 12 months of each other (asynchronous bilateral breast cancer, of which there were 35). Nineteen percent of all tumors were lobular carcinomas. Overall, the rate of receptor discordance between the two tumors was not significantly different from that previously reported between biopsies of primary tumor and metastases in patients with unilateral breast cancer. Synchronous receptor-positive tumors occurred significantly more frequently than expected, suggesting that the development of the two tumors was influenced by a common mechanism. In patients with asynchronous bilateral breast cancer there was a significantly longer interval between tumors if both were receptor-positive compared with concordant receptor-negative tumors and tumors with discordant receptor status. There was a significant discordance in the receptor status of asynchronous tumors when the histology also differed, indicating that the tumors in this group were likely to be separate primary tumors.

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