| Literature DB >> 25610676 |
W Dendas1, L Cappelle2, J Verguts1, G Orye3.
Abstract
Metastases to the female genital tract are rare, with metastatic disease restricted to the uterus being even less frequent. The primary tumor is most often intragenital rather than extragenital. The diagnosis is usually made after occurrence of gynecological symptoms. We describe the case of a 26-year-old female, in whom a curettage for menorrhagia revealed a uterine malignancy, at first thought to be a carcinosarcoma. Biochemistry only showed iron deficiency anemia. Imaging showed discrepant results with liver lesions, suspect of neoplastic or inflammatory disease. She underwent an abdominal hysterectomy and, peroperatively, a frozen section of a mass in the liver hilus demonstrated a cholangiocarcinoma. The diagnosis of a uterine metastasized cholangiocarcinoma was made. We emphasize the fact that uterine metastases have to be excluded in every woman with abnormal uterine bleeding and a personal history of malignancy. However, our case also indicates that gynecological metastatic disease may be the first presentation of an extragenital primary neoplasm.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25610676 PMCID: PMC4294282 DOI: 10.1155/2014/204915
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Obstet Gynecol ISSN: 2090-6692
Biochemical values at time of admission.
| Test | Value | Units | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hemoglobin | 9,4 | g/dL | 12,0–16,0 |
| White blood cell count | 11,3 | ×10³/mm³ | 3,5–11,0 |
| Platelets | 727 | ×10³/mm³ | 150–400 |
| Iron | 24 | μg/dL | 41–132 |
| Ferritin | 3,8 | μg/L | 11,0–307,0 |
| PT (%) | 73,8 | % | 80,0–120,0 |
| APTT | 29,4 | sec | 25,0–40,0 |
| Creatinine | 0,69 | mg/dL | 0,44–1,03 |
| GFR MDRD | >60 | mL/min/1,73 m² | >60 |
| Bilirubin total | 0,76 | mg/dL | 0–1,00 |
| AST (SGOT) | 17 | U/L | 13–42 |
| ALT (SGPT) | 17 | U/L | 10–40 |
| Gamma-GT | 49 | U/L | 5–24 |
| Lipase | 23 | U/L | 22–51 |
| TSH | 1,42 | mU/L | 0,37–3,51 |
| CRP | 44 | mg/L | 0,0–6,0 |
| HCG | <0,5 | U/L | <0,5 |
Figure 1Pelvic MRI showing a large uterus with disappearance of its zonal anatomy, yet lacking any signs of an endometrial tumor.
Figure 2PET-CT showing a hypermetabolic aspect of the uterus (not in this image), gallbladder fundus (white arrow pointing upward), and three liver lesions (black arrows pointing downward), all suspect for neoplastic or inflammatory lesions.
Figure 3Metastatic cervical wall infiltration, surrounded by normal endocervical glands.
Figure 4Irregular neoplastic glands infiltrating between the myometrial smooth muscle bundles.
Extragenital primary tumors most frequently metastasising to the uterine corpus.
| Extragenital site | % [ |
|---|---|
| Breast [ | 42,9 |
| Colon | 17,5 |
| Stomach [ | 11,1 |
| Pancreas | 11,1 |
| Gallbladder | 4,8 |
| Lung | 4,8 |
| Cutaneous melanoma [ | 3,2 |
| Urinary bladder | 3,2 |
| Thyroid | 1,6 |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma [ | Rare |
| Sarcoma | Rare |
Cases of gallbladder carcinoma metastasising to the uterus.
| Article | Number of cases |
|---|---|
| Charache (1941) [ | 1 |
|
Kumar and Hart (1982) [ | 3 |
| Schust et al. (1994) [ | 2 (1 restricted to the cervix) |
|
Martínez-Román et al. (2005) [ | 1 (restricted to the cervix) |
| Kefeli et al. (2009) [ | 1 |