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Volume 2, Issue 4 (Suppl)

Breast Can Curr Res, an open access journal

Breast Pathology 2017

August 23-24, 2017

August 23-24, 2017 Toronto, Canada

4

th

World Congress on

Breast Pathology and Cancer Diagnosis

Roberto N Miranda, Breast Can Curr Res 2017, 2:4 (Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2572-4118-C1-008

Breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma: A newly recognized entity: Diagnosis,

outcomes and misconceptions

Roberto N Miranda

The University of Texas, USA

B

reast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma (BI-ALCL) is a newly recognized clinicopathologic entity that affects

patients who received breast implants for cosmetic or reconstructive reasons. The lymphoma arises in the capsule around

the breast implant and usually presents with effusion, less frequently with a mass, and more rarely with lymphadenopathy.

Based on our experience with more than 100 cases, we have developed a pathologic staging that correlates with the risk of

lymphadenopathy and clinical outcomes. We have determined that complete surgical resection is the cornerstone of therapy,

and in many cases makes the use of chemotherapy unnecessary. We have also evaluated pathogenic mechanisms and assessed

epidemiologic evidence that may result in the develpment and progression of this lymphoma. Therefore, I would like to present

my experience with this lymphoma with a focus in the diagnosis, provide a historical perspective and summarize the features

that determined the World Health Organization to recognize that this is a distinct clinicopathologic entity. Lastly, I would like

to propose a strategy for screening of patients with suspicion of having this lymphoma, a diagnostic algorithm, the pathological

handling, sampling, and reporting for this lymphoma.

Biography

Roberto N Miranda has completed his MD at the Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, in Lima, Peru and after emigrating to United States, completed an AP

CP Residency at Brown University, fellowship in Hematopathology at Vanderbilt University, and has been Faculty at MD Anderson Cancer Center since 2007,

where he is currently working as a Professor in the Department of Hematopathology. He has an interest in T-cell lymphomas and has developed an expertise in

breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma, a topic on which he has several landmark publications and book chapters, and on which he has lectured

nationally and internationally.

Roberto.miranda@mdanderson.org