https://www.selleckchem.com/products/cd38-inhibitor-1.html Pseudoangiomatous stromal hyperplasia (PASH) is a benign proliferation of the breast, with few cases reported to date. While the etiology of the disease is uncertain, a prevailing theory is that PASH is hormonally responsive, especially in the presence of progesterone. Literature review shows a correlation between PASH development and oral contraceptive pill (OCP) use. We report a case of a 28-year-old autistic female who underwent excision of palpable bilateral breast masses where the histology of the left breast mass identified as PASH. Our patient had a history of multiple medications including OCPs and cytochrome p450 inhibitors that could lead to an increase in progesterone levels. Thus, supporting a theory that medications, in addition to OCPs, may lead to an increased occurrence of PASH in pre-menopausal women.Sebaceous carcinoma is a rare cutaneous malignant neoplasm with an estimated incidence rate of approximately 1-2 per 1 000 000 per year. It rarely presents as an extra-ocular type and it affects patients in between the sixth and eighth decades of life. This is a case of a 31-year-old male with a 10-year history of a right axillary mass with an incisional biopsy of a sebaceous carcinoma. The mass was 10 × 6 cm in largest diameter, erythematous, non-tender and irregularly shaped. The patient underwent wide excision of the right axillary mass with negative margins confirmed by frozen section under general anesthesia. A parascapular fasciocutaneous flap was done in order to provide coverage for the defect. The patient was then discharged improved on the fourth postoperative day. Although there has been no established clinical protocol for the staging, medical and surgical management for extra-ocular sebaceous carcinoma, early diagnosis accompanied with the proper surgical intervention, such as oncologic wide excision with negative margins, were both adequate and paramount to the diagnosis, course an