Authors
Zhihan Hao, Min Zheng, Bo Zhang
Published in
Gland surgery. Volume 15. Issue 5. Pages 148. May 31, 2026. Epub Apr 30, 2026.
Abstract
Primary breast lymphoma (PBL) is a rare extranodal lymphoma of which diagnosis is challenging due to overlapping clinical and imaging features with breast carcinoma. While the existence of PBL is known, the diagnostic significance of specific sonographic patterns like the "grid-like echo" and the critical imperative for exhaustive systemic staging to differentiate primary from systemic lymphoma warrant emphasis. This case is unique as it demonstrates a diagnostic journey from a bilateral "grid-like echo" on ultrasound to a revised diagnosis of a systemic, high-grade lymphoma, highlighting key pitfalls and the necessity of comprehensive workup.
A 38-year-old female presented with systemic symptoms. Bilateral breast ultrasound revealed Breast Imaging-Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) 4 lesions with a distinctive "grid-like echo" pattern, well-defined hypoechoic masses, and rich vascularity. Core needle biopsy confirmed a high-grade B-cell lymphoma. However, comprehensive staging-including bone marrow biopsy, cytogenetics, and positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT)-revealed widespread disease, a t(8;14) translocation, MYC rearrangement, and multifocal extranodal involvement. The final diagnosis was revised to systemic Burkitt-like lymphoma with 11q aberration, Ann Arbor Stage IV B. The patient received systemic chemotherapy, resulting in symptomatic improvement and resolution of breast lesions on follow-up.
While ultrasonography holds significant value in detecting and suggesting PBL, definitive diagnosis depends entirely on pathological evidence acquired through surgical biopsy. The cornerstone of treatment is systemic chemotherapy, and radical surgical resection does not improve patient survival. Therefore, the indispensable role of surgery lies in its diagnostic, not therapeutic, capacity. Enhancing awareness of PBL and establishing a multidisciplinary diagnostic model that integrates surgery, ultrasonography, pathology, and clinical practice is essential to avoid misdiagnosis and develop individualized treatment strategies.
PMID:
42299268
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 16 Jun 2026.
Read full publication at:
Please sign in
to see all details.
Advertisement
Stats
- Recommendations n/a n/a positive of 0 vote(s)
- Views 5
- Comments 0