Ductal Carcinoma in Situ of the Breast
Variant: Papillary Ductal Carcinoma In Situ
Also known as intracystic papillary carcinoma when it is within a large space
Diagnostic Criteria
- Large dilated duct or cystic space
- Four main patterns
- Cribriform DCIS
- Resembles ordinary cribriform DCIS on papillary stalks
- May arise in a papilloma
- If <3 mm or involves <30% of papilloma, diagnose as atypical ductal hyperplasia
- Myoepithelial cells should not be present in cribriform areas but may be present along stalks
- Tall hyperchromatic or stratified spindle cell
- Lined by single population of tall cells
- Elongate hyperchromatic stratified or pseudostratified nuclei perpendicular to stalk
- Complex arborizing thin, delicate fibrovascular stalks
- Myoepithelial cells are not typically present on the stalks
- May have nuclear clearing
- Compact columnar
- Lined by uniform population of often columnar cells
- Fine, evenly distributed chromatin
- Transitional cell
- Resembles low grade transitional cell carcinoma
- Cribriform DCIS
- High grade cytology rare
- Mitotic figures may be seen
- They are rare in papillomas over age 40
- Necrosis may be seen
- It is rare in papillomas over age 40
- Myoepithelial cells often cannot be demonstrated around the outside of papillary DCIS; however, papillary DCIS is not clinically an invasive carcinoma
- Invasion, when it occurs, is typically low grade infiltrating ductal or very rarely invasive papillary