| Literature DB >> 22788987 |
Masataka Kojima1, Junkichi Yokoyama, Shin Ito, Shinichi Ohba, Mitsuhisa Fujimaki, Katsuhisa Ikeda.
Abstract
Supraclavicular lymph node metastasis from endometrial carcinoma is considerably rarer than metastasis from uterine cervical cancer. To date, there have been no reported cases regarding systematic neck dissection as a salvage treatment. In this report, we describe the neck dissection procedure carried out on a 74-year-old woman with supraclavicular lymph node metastasis. Our objective was to histologically determine the origin of the metastasis while simultaneously providing appropriate treatment. The patient's past medical history included two prior cases of cancer: rectal cancer 7 years earlier and endometrial adenocarcinoma 4 years earlier. We determined that middle and lower jugular neck dissection was appropriate in treating this case based on the results of our preoperative FDG-PET and tumor markers. This surgery provided histological evidence that metastasis occurred from endometrial carcinoma. Middle and lower jugular neck dissection was expected to improve the patient's prognosis without impacting the patient's active daily life. We have continued to monitor the patient closely over an extended period.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22788987 PMCID: PMC3407778 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-10-143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Figure 1Preoperative CT findings. The CT showed a single left supraclavicular lymph node (arrow) (a) axial section, (b) coronal section
Figure 2Changes of tumor markers (CA19-9, CA125, and CEA). The course of the treatment for endometrial carcinoma and the changes of tumor markers
Figure 3The positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT). PET-CT showed a single left supraclavicular lymph node (the arrow) with high uptake (SUV max 6.0). There were no other metastatic lesions in the body
Figure 4Intraoperative findings. (a) Thoracic duct was resected with supraclaviclar metastatic lymph nodes. Each number shows: (1) external jugular vein; (2) resected thoracic duct; (3) internal jugular vein. (b) The inferior belly of the omohyoid muscle was cut distally and tightly sutured on the venous angle. (1) External jugular vein; (2) inferior belly of omohyoid muscle augmented to resected thoracic duct; (3) superior belly of omohyoid muscle
Figure 5Immunohistchemical staining examination. Immunohistchemical staining examination using cytokeratin7 and cytokeratin20 indicated that the neck metastasis originated from endometrial adenocarcinoma