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mammary ductal hyperplasia

Wednesday 18 March 2015

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Synopsis

- Mild ductal hyperplasia is three or four cell layers thick.
- The nuclei are normochromatic, oval, with inconspicuous nucleoli and no mitotic activity.
- Papillary hyperplasia is part of the spectrum of mild and moderate ductal hyperplasia.

  • The papillae are blunt or delicate and irregularly shaped.
  • Intraluminal proliferation may create a solid ball of epithelium attached to one side of the duct and surrounded by a cleft-like space - creating an appearance reminiscent of a renal glomerulus.

- In florid ductal hyperplasia with apocrine change, the individual cells have abundant granular eosinophilic cytoplasm and distinct cytoplasmic borders.

- The entire lumen can be filled up by the proliferating ductal epithelial cells.

  • The nuclei are oval and normochromatic and mitotic activity is not increased.
  • There is no necrosis.
  • Several elongated clefts can be present at the periphery and within the cluster.
  • There is some streaming effect due to oval nuclei being aligned in parallel bundles.

- In florid ductal hyperplasia, there can be several peripheral elongated clefts.

  • They are bound on one side by basally located cells and on the other side by solid intraluminal cluster of epithelal cells.

Differential diagnosis

- mammary atypical ductal hyperplasia

  • In patient with atypical ductal hyperplasia, the risk of invasive breast carcinoma is approximately 5 times that of the general population.
  • The cytologic features are indistinguishable from low-grade DCIS (monomorphic cells with round or oval nuclei, micropapillary structures, tufts, fronds, cribriform areas etc).
  • But usually they are admixed with ductal hyperplasia or show partial involvement of terminal duct-lobular unit.