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Breast Lymphoma Associated With Breast Implants: Two Case-reports and a Review of the Literature

Guylaine Gaudet;  Jonathan W. Friedberg;  Andrew Weng a;  Geraldine S. Pinkus a; Arnold S. Freedman
 
a Department of Pathology, Hematopathology Division, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
 
Leukemia and Lymphoma, Volume 43, Issue 1 2002 , pages 115 - 119
 

Abstract

Breast lymphoma is a rare entity consisting mostly of B-cell lymphomas that affects older women. Very few cases of breast lymphomas of T-cell origin have been reported. Even fewer cases of breast lymphomas have been reported in women who have received breast implants. Silicone, a frequent component of breast implants, has been extensively investigated as a possible etiologic agent for some neoplasias and autoimmune disorders, including non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. We herein report two unusual cases of anaplastic large cell lymphoma of T-cell phenotype developing in the breasts of women who had received breast implants.

 

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