Orbital fat regeneration following hormonal treatment of metastatic breast carcinoma
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Taylor and Francis Ltd
Abstract
Enophthalmos in the setting of breast cancer metastatic to the orbit results primarily from the disease pathogenesis, or secondary to treatment effects. Orbital volume restoration and fat regeneration following endocrine treatment monotherapy has not been previously reported. A 76- year-old previously healthy female presented with progressive right enophthalmos secondary to metastatic lobular breast carcinoma. Treatment with an aromatase inhibitor (letrozole) resulted in tumor regression and orbital fat restoration with a corresponding improvement in orbital volume and enophthalmos on clinical exam. The patient is alive on continued letrozole with no progressive disease ten years after diagnosis. This case illustrates the resilience of orbital soft tissues and ability of orbital fat to regenerate in face of breast cancer metastasis. We hypothesize that endocrine monotherapy, and avoidance of radiation therapy, allowed for differentiation of remaining orbital stem cells, and facilitated the fat regenerative process. © 2018 Taylor & Francis.
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Keywords
Breast carcinoma, Enophthalmos, Fat regeneration, Orbital fat, Orbital metastasis, Adipose tissue, Aged, Antineoplastic agents, Aromatase inhibitors, Breast neoplasms, Carcinoma, lobular, Female, Humans, Nitriles, Orbit, Orbital neoplasms, Regeneration, Tomography, x-ray computed, Triazoles, Ca 27-29 antigen, Cytokeratin, Cytokeratin 7, Estrogen receptor, Letrozole, Pan cytokeratin, Progesterone receptor, Unclassified drug, Antineoplastic agent, Aromatase inhibitor, Nitrile, Triazole derivative, Article, Bone marrow metastasis, Cancer hormone therapy, Case report, Clinical article, Computer assisted tomography, Eye biopsy, Human, Lobular carcinoma, Metastatic breast cancer, Orbit fracture, Tissue regeneration, Tumor regression, X-ray computed tomography, Breast tumor, Diagnostic imaging, Orbit tumor, Pathology, Pathophysiology, Physiology, Secondary