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Rare disease
Toothache: an unlikely presentation of secondary breast malignancy
  1. Ashley Walden1,
  2. Nassim Parvizi2,
  3. Taran Tatla3
  1. 1Department of ENT, Queens Hospital BHRH NHS Trust, Essex, UK
  2. 2Department of General Surgery, Northwick Park Hospital, NWLH NHS Trust, Middlesex, UK
  3. 3Department of ENT, Northwick Park Hospital, NWLH NHS Trust, Middlesex, UK
  1. Correspondence to Ashley Walden, ashkando{at}yahoo.com

Summary

An 81-year-old female presented to the maxillo-facial department with a 6-month history of left-sided toothache and upper lip and cheek numbness. She had previously undergone a right mastectomy for breast adenocarcinoma, followed 6 years later by left mastectomy with pneumonectomy for contralateral breast and lung metastases. Following buccal biopsies and MRI of the head and neck, the patient was referred to our head and neck team. The MRI showed a large left maxillary sinus mass and transnasal endoscopic biopsies under general anaesthesia of this confirmed distant breast carcinoma metastasis. The patient was discussed at the Head and Neck Multidisciplinary Team meeting. Further surgical resection was not thought appropriate and the patient has subsequently undergone curative dose radiotherapy to the face. She remains alive with symptom control 8 months following this presentation.

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests None.

  • Patient consent Obtained.