Reports (Aug 2020)

A Case of 10-Year Survival after Adrenalectomy for Isolated Adrenal Metastasis of Breast Cancer

  • Tsuyoshi Nakagawa,
  • Goshi Oda,
  • Akihiro Yano,
  • Hiroshi Kawachi,
  • Hiroyuki Uetake

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/reports3030022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3
p. 22

Abstract

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Isolated adrenal metastasis of breast cancer is very rare, so adrenalectomy for breast cancer metastasis is rarely performed. The case of a breast cancer patient with five-year survival after resection of a left isolated adrenal metastasis is presented. A 70-year-old woman underwent left modified radical mastectomy and axillary lymphadenectomy for invasive ductal carcinoma (T2N1M0) 9 years earlier. At regular follow-up, a left adrenal mass, 4 cm in diameter, was seen on ultrasound examination and computed tomography (CT). Endoscopic adrenalectomy was performed. Pathological examination confirmed isolated adrenal metastasis of breast cancer. After surgery, hormone therapy was given for 5 years. Ten years after adrenalectomy, no metastatic lesions in other organs have been found on CT. Adrenalectomy for a metastatic adrenal tumor of breast cancer may provide survival benefits when combined with systemic hormone therapy and chemotherapy, particularly in patients with disease confined to the adrenal glands.

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