Oestrogen Receptor Positive Metastatic Eccrine Porocarcinoma: A Case Report and Review of Anti-Oestrogen Therapy in Rare Cancers

Case Rep Oncol. 2024 Mar 27;17(1):497-503. doi: 10.1159/000535328. eCollection 2024 Jan-Dec.

Abstract

Introduction: Rare cancers, in aggregate, represent a significant burden of disease in oncology and remain therapeutically challenging to manage due to a lack of clinical trials. Eccrine porocarcinoma is a rare cutaneous sweat-gland malignancy for which there remains no standard approach to metastatic disease.

Case presentation: We describe a patient diagnosed with metastatic disease, confirmed on bone biopsy; pathological analysis further revealed this was oestrogen receptor positive. She was commenced on the aromatase inhibitor letrozole, and denosumab, and showed a significant clinical and radiological response on bone scan within 7 months. At the time of report, over 2 years since commencing letrozole, she remains well with no evidence of progression.

Conclusion: Our experience adds to the literature suggesting anti-oestrogen therapy can have significant benefit in patients with ER-positive non-breast cancer and is in keeping with increasing interest in therapies agnostic to site of origin but guided by expression/mutation of oncogenic drivers.

Keywords: Anti-oestrogen therapy; Aromatase inhibitors; Case report; Eccrine porocarcinoma; Oestrogen receptor positive.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

Grants and funding

There was no specific funding for this work. However, Dr. Kalakonda was an NIHR Clinical Research Fellow at the time of writing. The job role was funded to support research in oncology and haemato-oncology by the CRN North West Coast.