The phyllodes tumor
Receiving a phyllodes tumor diagnosis can be unsettling. The word itself is intimidating. This page is here to explain what it really is, what comes next, and why — in most cases — there's no reason to panic.
A phyllodes tumor is a rare fibroepithelial tumor — fewer than 1% of breast tumors. It looks like a fibroadenoma, but stands apart through its ability to grow quickly and, in rare cases, to behave aggressively. The vast majority of phyllodes tumors — about 60 to 75% — are entirely benign.
Its name comes from the Greek phyllon, meaning "leaf" — a reference to the leaf-like architecture seen under the microscope. The older term "cystosarcoma phyllodes" has been abandoned because it is misleading: most of these tumors are neither cysts nor sarcomas.
My approach: walking you through this precise diagnosis, removing the tumor with adequate margins to prevent recurrence, and arranging a simple, reassuring follow-up. This is a codified surgery, now guided by the 2025–2026 SENORIF guidelines.
Uncertain about your diagnosis? The differential between fibroadenoma and phyllodes tumor can be subtle — a specialized second opinion clarifies the nature of the lesion and the right surgical strategy.








