| Literature DB >> 24959226 |
Hidehiro Watanabe1, Tomonori Uruma1, Tokuro Tsunoda2, Gen Tazaki2, Atsushi Suga3, Yusuke Nakamura3, Shunsuke Yamada3, Takuma Tajiri4.
Abstract
The present study reports the case of a 67-year-old female patient who was initially diagnosed with pulmonary aspergilloma. This diagnosis was based on a chest computed tomography (CT) scan showing a cavitary lesion of 3.5 cm in diameter, with fungus ball-like shadows inside, and an air crescent sign in the right upper lung. At 63 years old, the patient was treated for transitional cell cancer of the urothelium (non-invasive, pT1N0M0) by total cystectomy, ileal conduit diversion and urostomy. For 4 years post-operatively, the patient was healthy and had no clinical symptoms, and the air crescent sign was not identified by chest CT until the patient had reached 67 years of age. However, a final diagnosis of lung metastasis of transitional cell cancer of the urothelium was histopathologically identified subsequent to video-assisted thoracic surgery. Although it is rare that transitional cell cancer moves to the lung and makes a cavitary lesion, a differential diagnosis of cancer is necessary, even when examining infected patients with air crescent signs that are characteristic of aspergilloma. The physician must be mindful of metastatic pulmonary tumors that closely resemble aspergillomas, not only in infectious diseases, but also in oncological practice. Primary surgical removal should be considered.Entities:
Keywords: air crescent sign; aspergilloma; fungus ball; metastatic lung cancer; transitional cell cancer
Year: 2014 PMID: 24959226 PMCID: PMC4063589 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2014.2076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1Initial chest X-ray and CT findings. (A) Plain chest X-ray showing a nodule 3.5 cm in diameter next to the pleura in the right upper lung. (B) Chest CT revealing a lung cavity with ball-like structures and air crescent signs. CT, computed tomography.
Figure 2Resected lung tissue and histopathological findings (hematoxylin and eosin staining). (A) Resected lung tissue with fungus ball-like structures inside the cavity. (B) Planar growth of squamous cells in the surrounding area, mostly solid tumor with papillary growth progressing inward (magnification, ×100). (C) Transitional cell carcinoma (magnification, ×400). (D) Center of the fungus ball-like structure (magnification, ×100). Growth of transitional cell cancer (arrow) around the globular structure, covering the tumor stromal tissue (*) inside the cavity.