usual ductal hyperplasia

File:Histopathology of usual ductal hyperplasia.jpg

File:Histopathology of usual ductal hyperplasia, annotated.png. As seen on higher magnification H&E stain at left, it has the usual irregular "slit-like" lumina. However, this case had almost moderate atypia with somewhat enlarged vesicular nuclei in the periphery, and therefore immunohistochemistry was performed that confirmed UDH:
- Estrogen receptor showing heterogeneous positivity, rather than the diffusely positive expression seen in atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH)
- CK 5/6 with a mosaic pattern, predominantly in the central zone, rather than the negative expression seen in ADH
- E-cadherin and p120 showing membranous staining, rather than being negative and cytoplasmic, respectively, in lobular carcinoma in situ
- Myoepithelial cell stain (calponin in this case) showing circumferential staining, rather than the absent staining seen in breast cancer.Image by Mikael Häggström, MD. Source for findings: {{cite web|url=https://www.pathologyoutlines.com/topic/breastepithelialductalhyperplasia.html|title=Usual ductal hyperplasia|website=Pathology Outlines|author=Sofia Lérias, M.D., Melinda Lerwill, M.D.}} Last author update: 11 February 2021]]

Usual ductal hyperplasia (UDH) is a benign lesion of the breast wherein cells look very similar to normal. It is a spectrum of changes that can range from minimal stratification of cells to proliferations that are just short of atypical ductal hyperplasia.

Histopathology

Usual ductal hyperplasia is typically a cohesive proliferation with haphazard, jumbled cell arrangement or streaming growth pattern. Cells have mild variation in cellular and nuclear size and shape.{{cite web|url=https://www.pathologyoutlines.com/topic/breastepithelialductalhyperplasia.html|title=Usual ductal hyperplasia|author= Sofia Lérias, M.D., Melinda Lerwill, M.D.|website=Pathology Outlines}} Last author update: 11 February 2021. Last staff update: 25 April 2022

References