Breast cancer behaves differently according to the primary tumor location. Medially located breast tumors were thought to have a worse prognosis than laterally located breast tumors. Studies showed that central tumors tend to present at a relatively more advanced stage with more features of locally advanced disease. Lateral, medial, and central breast tumors are not well studied in Bahrain and worldwide; therefore, we aimed to clarify the incidence and clinicopathological characteristics of each and to explore the impact of primary tumor location on the prognosis.
This is a cross-sectional, retrospective review involving 233 women from Bahrain with consecutive breast cancer who were divided into 3 groups in relation to primary tumor location: lateral, medial, and central. Pertinent clinicopathological variables were analyzed in relation to the primary tumor localization in the breast.
Patients were divided into lateral breast cancer (n = 133, 57.1%), medial breast cancer (n = 64, 27.5%), and central breast cancer (n = 36, 15.4%). Chi-square (χ2) test showed a significant association between central tumor location and tumor size (P = .008), lymph node status (P = .010), and tumor stage (P < .001).
This is the first study from Bahrain regarding the possible impact of primary tumor location on the outcome of breast cancer. Although the lateral breast tumors have the highest incidence, the central tumors were more likely to present with a locally advanced disease, larger than 5 cm tumor size, and axillary lymph node metastasis. They also tended to have a higher ratio of lymphovascular invasion and HER2 overexpression. Multicenter meta-analysis is needed to evaluate the real impact of primary tumor location and internal mammary lymph node evaluation on the outcome of breast cancer.
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