Case Report: Primary cutaneous apocrine carcinoma mimicking breast carcinoma - a rare diagnostic challenge
Masih Kameh Khosh, Tobias Hirsch, Hans-Joachim Schulze, Cornelius Kuhnen, Sascha Wellenbrock

TL;DR
A 60-year-old man's axillary tumor was initially mistaken for breast cancer but was correctly diagnosed as a rare skin cancer after multidisciplinary evaluation.
Contribution
Highlights the diagnostic challenge of primary cutaneous apocrine carcinoma mimicking breast cancer and the value of interdisciplinary care.
Findings
Initial histomorphological features led to a misdiagnosis of apocrine mammary carcinoma.
Complete excision and multidisciplinary evaluation confirmed primary cutaneous apocrine carcinoma.
Interdisciplinary collaboration is essential for accurate diagnosis and treatment of atypical tumors.
Abstract
A 60-year-old male patient presented to a senological clinic with a left axillary tumor. The histomorphological characteristics were ambiguous, initially pointing to apocrine carcinoma of mammary origin. This suspicion led to a delay in establishing the correct diagnosis. Only after complete tumor excision and comprehensive work-up in a multidisciplinary dermato-oncological clinic could a definitive diagnosis of primary cutaneous apocrine carcinoma (PCAC) be reached, allowing for appropriate therapy to be commenced. The patient had an unremarkable medical history and had presented for excisional biopsy of an axillary nodule. Following the cancer diagnosis, several diagnostic tests and histopathological evaluations were initially performed in a senological setting to assess the likelihood of (metastatic) mammary carcinoma. Workup included breast ultrasonography, CT and MRI imaging and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer and Skin Lesions · Breast Lesions and Carcinomas · Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment
