Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Cases (Dec 2021)

Secretory Carcinoma of the Upper Lip: A Case Report and Review of the Literature

  • Yousef Hammad, DMD,
  • Ali Edrisi, DMD, MS,
  • Timothy W. Neal, DDS,
  • Yisheng Fang, MD, PhD,
  • Thomas Schlieve, DDS, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
p. 100236

Abstract

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Secretory carcinoma (SC), formerly known as mammary analogue secretory carcinoma (MASC), is a rare salivary gland tumor that was first described by Skalova et al., in 2010 [1]. Thirty-two cases of SC involving the lips have been reported in the literature. The current report describes a case of SC discovered in the upper lip of a 20-year-old-female. The lesion was excised, and the pathology report returned as SC with positive margins. One month later, the patient was treated with radical excision of the lesion with 1cm margins, and the pathology report described SC of the inner aspect of the right side of the upper lip that was unifocal, 0.3cm in size with a 3mm depth of invasion. The margins were uninvolved by the invasive tumor, and the distance from the closest margin was at least 5mm to the deep margin. No lymphovascular invasion or perineural invasion was identified. The tumor cells were positive for mammaglobin, S100, and GATA-3. The purpose of this report is to highlight the presentation and review the morphologic and immunohistochemical features of SC. Our aim is to add to the existing body of literature and present an extremely rare case of SC of the upper lip.

Keywords