| Literature DB >> 22741562 |
Hiroshi Sakai1, Hiroyuki Egi, Takao Hinoi, Masakazu Tokunaga, Yasuo Kawaguchi, Manabu Shinomura, Tomohiro Adachi, Koji Arihiro, Hideki Ohdan.
Abstract
Although about 50% of lung cancers have distant metastasis at the time of initial diagnosis, colonic metastases are extremely rare. This report presents a rare clinical case of colonic metastasis from primary squamous cell carcinoma of the lung. A 60-year-old female with anorexia and fatigue was referred to the department of pulmonary surgery in our hospital. The patient was diagnosed with primary squamous cell carcinoma of the lung, T2b N3 M1b Stage IV, and chemoradiotherapy was initiated. This treatment led to a good partial response in the primary lung lesion without any new metastatic lesions. The patient developed left abdominal pain due to a bulky sigmoid colon tumor 6 months later, and was preoperatively diagnosed with primary colon cancer. She underwent colonic resection, and the pathology specimen demonstrated poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma that was suspected to be colonic metastasis from the primary lung cancer. The postoperative course was uneventful, and she was discharged. Chemotherapy for the lung cancer was scheduled in the department of pulmonary surgery. This report presented a rare case of colonic metastasis from lung cancer. When patients with advanced primary lung cancer complain of abdominal symptoms, we should consider gastrointestinal tract metastasis from lung cancer.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22741562 PMCID: PMC3433337 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-10-127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Figure 1Chest X-ray and computed tomography(CT) shows a huge tumor in the right lung field. (a) Chest X-ray shows a 55 mm round mass in the right upper lung field. (b) Chest computed tomography scan reveals the mass in the right upper lobe with infiltration to B2 and B3a bronchus.
Figure 2Chest computed tomography (CT) scan. The CT scan reveals the mass in the right upper lobe and enlarged lymph nodes of the upper mediastinum, around the upper thoracic esophagus and lesser curvature of the stomach. Positron emission tomography (PET)-CT reveals positive findings of the same lesions as the CT scan with no other positive lesion (maximum standardized uptake value: lung tumor 19.5, lymph nodes #2 L 9.3, #7 24.3, lesser curvature of the stomach 13.2).
Figure 3Colonoscopy discloses bulky disease with stricture in the sigmoid colon. Abdominal computed tomography scan reveals sigmoid colon tumor invading the abdominal wall unaccompanied by swelling of colonic lymph nodes and distant metastasis.
Figure 4Gross specimen of sigmoid colon shows a bulky tumor invading the transverse colon without nodal involvement.
Figure 5The pathology specimen demonstrates poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma (H&E stain, x40/x200). The carcinoma cells are negative for CDX2, cytokeratin20, MUC2 and MUC5AC on immunohistochemistry (x200).