Franco D, Martin B, Smadja C, Szekely A M, Rougier P
Cancer. 1987 Jul 1;60(1):96-9. doi: 10.1002/1097-0142(19870701)60:1<96::aid-cncr2820600117>3.0.co;2-s.
Obstructive jaundice developed in two patients 6 and 8 years after surgery for breast carcinoma. In both patients exploration disclosed a tumor of the hilus which was a biliary metastasis of breast cancer. Surgical resection was performed. Examination of the resected specimen showed infiltration of the duct walls by sheets of metastatic carcinomatous cells from the previous breast cancer. The postoperative course was uneventful in both patients with disappearance of all symptoms due to the biliary obstruction. The first patient died 4 years later from peritoneal deposits and the second was alive at 30 months with a metastasis to the hip. These observations differ from most of those previously reported, by the localization of the tumor at the hilus and the direct infiltration of the duct walls by the tumor. The results of this study suggest that aggressive surgical treatment may be the treatment of choice in patients with extrahepatic biliary metastases of breast carcinoma.