Paget disease of the nipple
Appearance
Eczema-like changes in the skin of the NAC, in association with an underlying breast cancer
Epidemiology
[edit | edit source]- Accounts for <1% of breast malignancies
- 90% of patients with Paget disease have an underlying breast carcinoma
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- Paget cell - large, pale-staining cell with round or oval nuclei and large nucleoli located between the normal keratinocytes of the nipple epidermis
- Theories of development
- Epidermotropic - perhaps more likely - Paget cells spread into the lactiferous sinuses under the nipple and upward to invade the overlying epidermis of the nipple
- In-situ transformation - less likely
- Paget cells do not invade through the basement membrane, and are categorised as carcinoma-in-situ
- Commonly associated with an underlying breast cancer, often in the large sinuses just under the nipple
- Most likely HER2+ and hormone negative
- 90% IDC, 10% DCIS
Presentation
[edit | edit source]- Dermatitis of the nipple - appears eczematoid and moist or dry and psoriatic.
- About half have an underlying breast mass
Differential diagnosis
[edit | edit source]- Eczema - usually spares the nipple itself
- Contact dermatitis
- Post-radiation dermatitis
Workup
[edit | edit source]- Punch/core biopsy of nipple skin, under LA
- Specimen containing Paget cells confirms the diagnosis (pathognomic finding)
- Thorough investigation for occult malignancy, especially for patients having BCS
- Mammogram/USS
- Proceed to MRI if concerning presentation and other imaging normal
Treatment options
[edit | edit source]- Mastectomy with axillary staging
- Wide local excision of the nipple and areola with axillary staging and radiotherapy