Invasive lobular breast cancer: Focus on prevention, genetics, diagnosis, and treatment
- PMID: 38897820
- DOI: 10.1053/j.seminoncol.2024.05.001
Invasive lobular breast cancer: Focus on prevention, genetics, diagnosis, and treatment
Abstract
Invasive lobular cancer (ILC) is the most common of the breast cancer special types, accounting for up to 15% of all breast malignancies. The distinctive biological features of ILC include the loss of the cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin, which drives the tumor's peculiar discohesive growth pattern, with cells arranged in single file and dispersed throughout the stroma. Typically, such tumors originate in the lobules, are more commonly bilateral compared to invasive ductal cancer (IDC) and require a more accurate diagnostic examination through imaging. They are luminal in molecular subtype, and exhibit estrogen and progesterone receptor positivity and HER2 negativity, thus presenting a more unpredictable response to neoadjuvant therapies. There has been a significant increase in research focused on this distinctive breast cancer subtype, including studies on its pathology, its clinical and surgical management, and the high-resolution definition of its genomic profile, as well as the development of new therapeutic perspectives. This review will summarize the heterogeneous pattern of this unique disease, focusing on challenges in its comprehensive clinical management and on future insights and research objectives.
Keywords: Breast cancer surgery; Diagnosis; Genomics; Imaging; Lobular breast cancer; Treatment.
Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest No financial/personal interest from all Authors with the exception of Prof. Giuseppe Curigliano.
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