Abstract

Mastitis frequently affects women of childbearing age. Of all the pathological breast conditions requiring specific management, autoimmune mastitis is in the third position after infection and breast cancer. The aim of this literature review was to make a comprehensive description of autoimmune diseases targeting the mammary gland. Four main histological patterns of autoimmune mastitis are described: (i) lymphocytic infiltrates; (ii) ductal ectasia; (iii) granulomatous mastitis; and (iv) vasculitis. Our literature search found that all types of autoimmune disease may target the mammary gland: organ-specific diseases (diabetes, thyroiditis); connective tissue diseases (such as systemic erythematosus lupus or Sjögren’s syndrome); vasculitides (granulomatosis with polyangiitis, eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis, giant cell arteritis, polyarteritis nodosa, Behçet’s disease); granulomatous diseases (sarcoidosis, Crohn’s disease); and IgG4-related disease. Cases of breast-specific autoimmune diseases have also been reported, including idiopathic granulomatous mastitis. These breast-limited inflammatory diseases are sometimes the first symptom of a systemic autoimmune disease. Although autoimmune mastitis is rare, it is probably underdiagnosed or misdiagnosed. Early diagnosis may allow us to detect systemic diseases at an earlier stage, which could help to initiate a prompt, appropriate therapeutic strategy. In case of suspected autoimmune mastitis, we hereby propose a diagnostic pathway and discuss the potential pathophysiological pathways leading to autoimmune breast damage.

Highlights

  • Mastitis is a common pathological condition among women of childbearing age

  • For didactic purpose and because the first-line investigation for breast disease comprises a breast biopsy and pathological analysis, we decided to develop our description of autoimmune mastitis according to the four above-mentioned histological patterns

  • In the case series of 20 patients from Saudi Arabia reported by Baslaim and coll. [139], Idiopathic Granulomatous Mastitis (IdGM) involved fewer than 2% of benign breast conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Mastitis is a common pathological condition among women of childbearing age. It is an important diagnostic challenge as breast cancer and infections (notably tuberculosis) must be sought and rejected. Autoimmune mastitis belongs to a third group of etiologies. This group has recently been described in the medical literature and includes a wide range of autoimmune diseases [1,2,3]. Recent case reports are numerous, suggesting that this condition is underdiagnosed or misdiagnosed [1,2,3,4,5]. The clinical spectrum of autoimmune mastitis is broad: while some patients are asymptomatic, others have severe, recurrent breast inflammation, painful nodules, nipple discharge or retraction, and/or lymphadenopathy

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