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©2014 MFMER | slide-1 Breast Mass on Mammography Bobbi Pritt, MD

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©2014 MFMER | slide-1

Breast Mass on MammographyBobbi Pritt, MD

©2014 MFMER | slide-2

Clinical Presentation• 68 year old woman was noted to have 2

adjacent masses in the right breast on screening mammography

• Well-circumscribed, lobulated, and measured 1.8 x 1.7 x 1.0 in aggregate

• The masses increased in size over a 6-month follow-up interval, prompting surgical removal

©2014 MFMER | slide-3

H&E 20x

H&E 40x

H&E 100x

H&E 200x

H&E 400x

©2014 MFMER | slide-10

Diagnosis?

©2014 MFMER | slide-11

Sparganosis• Infection caused by species of cestodes

(tapeworms) in the Spirometra genus• S. mansoni, S. ranarum, S. mansonoides, S.

erinacei, S. proliferum• First described by Patrick Manson from China in

1882• Spirometra is in the order Pseudophyllidea

• Order includes Diphyllobothrium latum

©2014 MFMER | slide-12

Pseudophyllidea Cyclophyllidea

• Taenia solium• Taenia saginata• Dipylidium caninum• Hymenolepis nana• Hymenolepis diminuta• Echinococcus species

• Diphyllobothrium latum(and other Diphyllobothrium spp.)

• Spirometra species

©2014 MFMER | slide-13

Humans are an incidental parentenicor second intermediate host

©2014 MFMER | slide-14

Humans as an Intermediate Host• We are host to the larval stage of the cestode• Other larval cestodes found in humans:

• Taenia solium (cysticercosis)• Taenia multiceps and T. serialis (coenurosis)• Echinococcus species (echinococcosis)

©2014 MFMER | slide-15

Anatomy

Sparganum removed from the chest wall of a patient. The worm measured about 70 mm long. Images from a specimen courtesy of the Oklahoma State Department of Health.

Sparganum removed from the ocular conjunctiva of a patient from Taiwan. The worm measured 40 mm long. Image courtesy of Dr. John H. Cross and the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD.

©2014 MFMER | slide-16

Epidemiology and Clinical Presentation• Typically seen in patients from East Asia• May involve multiple organ systems:

subcutaneous tissue, breast, orbit, GU tract, lungs, pleural cavity, abdominal viscera and CNS

• Symptoms vary by location• S. proliferum can cause proliferative lesions in

infected tissue, with multiple larvae present

©2014 MFMER | slide-17

Lu et al. Retrospective epidemiological analysis of sparganosis in mainland China from 1959 to 2012. Epidemiol Infect 2014;142(12): 2654-61.

• Retrospective review of 1061 cases:• Patients were <1 year to 80 years old (mean 29

years)• Transmission:

• 54.6% - application of frog meat as a poultice• 33.8% - foodborne (frogs and snakes)• 11.5% - waterborne (drinking untreated water)

• Organs involved:• Subcutaneous/muscle – 43.1%; • Ocular – 31.0%• CNS – 17.9%

©2014 MFMER | slide-18

Changing epidemiologic patterns in China• 1959 – 1979: most cases (83.8%) were from

poultices• 50% involved the eyes • Post 2000, only 8.3% involve the eyes

• From 2000 onward, 63.9% of cases are foodborne

• 47.8% involve the CNS• (before 1979, there were no cases of CNS

involvement reported)

©2014 MFMER | slide-19

Diagnosis• Identification of a sparganum from tissue• Species level identification is not required for

treatment

©2014 MFMER | slide-20

Key morphologic features• Features of a cestode:

• Myxoid matrix surrounded by an acellular tegument

• Calcareous corpuscles

©2014 MFMER | slide-21

Calcareous corpuscles – a histologic features of cestodes:

Mineral concretionscontaining calcium,polysaccharides,and lipids Adult Taenia sp. proglottid

E. granulosus protoscolexTaenia sp. (coenurosis)

©2014 MFMER | slide-22

Key Morphologic Features, continued• Features supportive of sparganosis:

• No fluid-filled “bladder” surrounding the tapeworm like cysticercosis

• No suckers or hooklets of a protoscolex• Longitudinal smooth muscle fibers

Comparison of larval cestodes in tissueSparganosis Cysticercosis Coenurosis Echinococcosis

Causativeorganism

Spirometra spp.

Taenia solium Taenia multiceps and T. serialis

Echinococcus spp.

Common locations

Subcutaneous tissue, breast, any organ

Subcutaneoustissues, brain, eye

Skin and subcutaneous tissues

Liver, lung

20x – 40x total magnification(2x-4x objective)

400x total magnification

©2014 MFMER | slide-24

Further History and Follow-up• Patient was originally from the Philippines

• Moved to the U.S. 10 years prior to presentation

• She reported ingestion of frog meat in the Philippines

• Removal is curative

• Treatment with antihelminths (mebendazole, albendazole, praziquantel) is not generally effective, but may be used for cases of proliferative sparganosis in addition to surgical removal

• Patient was counseled on not eating raw frog or snake flesh in the future.

©2014 MFMER | slide-25

Bonus Question• Which other human parasite is transmitted

through ingestion of water containing infected copepods?

• Dracunculus medinensis

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