Lobular tumors of the breast, formerly known as lobular cystic sarcoma, are tumors that occur in the mesenchymal tissue of the breast. It is classified as benign, junctional and malignant. It occurs in middle-aged women and often presents as a painless lump in one breast without skin involvement. Patients often present with a large breast lump or recurrent recurrence after removal of a small lump as a symptom. The author has seen patients with recurrence after eight surgeries. The disease is predominantly benign and junctional and usually does not metastasize. However, hematogenous metastases can occur in malignant cases. The best treatment is total mastectomy to avoid inadequate local excision that may cause recurrence. Unlike breast cancer, this disease does not require radiation or chemotherapy and has a good prognosis. Therefore, a better treatment is subcutaneous total mastectomy with preservation of the nipple + simultaneous breast reconstruction. This allows for complete removal of the tumor while achieving a very realistic breast reconstruction. Here is a patient with a recurrent lobulated breast tumor after 6 surgeries. The following picture shows a patient with recurrent lobulated breast tumor after 6 surgeries.