Case report describes myeloid sarcoma relapse in breast after nasal cavity presentation
This publication is a case report involving a single 68-year-old female patient. The clinical scenario involves myeloid sarcoma and acute myeloid leukemia. The patient received localized radiotherapy and cytarabine-based systemic chemotherapy as initial treatment. She achieved complete remission following this initial treatment phase. Further chemotherapy and hypofractionated radiotherapy were utilized during the course of management.
A relapse occurred in the right breast 6 years after the primary myeloid sarcoma of the right nasal cavity. Relapse was confirmed by myeloperoxidase positivity. The follow-up duration was 6 years disease-free interval prior to this event. Adverse events were not reported in the source material. The setting was not reported in the available data.
The authors emphasize the critical role of a comprehensive immunohistochemical panel. This includes myeloid-specific markers to differentiate myeloid sarcoma from poorly differentiated carcinomas. Clinicians should utilize these markers for accurate diagnosis. The practice relevance highlights this diagnostic necessity.
This case highlights the potential for late relapse in myeloid sarcoma. The evidence remains limited to a single patient experience. Limitations include the single patient sample size which restricts generalizability. No statistical analysis was performed due to the study design.