| Literature DB >> 25624886 |
Jiemin Zhao1, Yan Tan2, Yugang Wu3, Wei Zhao2, Jun Wu1, Mei Ji1, Liangrong Shi1, Jingting Jiang1, Changping Wu1.
Abstract
In recent years, the number of patients exhibiting multiple primary malignant neoplasms has been increasing. The current study reports the rare case of a 61-year-old Chinese female with eight histopathologically confirmed primary malignant neoplasms; to the best of our knowledge, such a high number of malignant neoplasms in one patient has not previously been described in the English literature. The tumors originated from the colon (five separate tumors over 32 years), the endometrium, the breast and the small intestine. It is important to diagnose multiple primary malignant neoplasms as such patients generally exhibit a more favorable prognosis compared with metastatic carcinoma patients. In addition, prolonged follow-up after surgery should be considered.Entities:
Keywords: multiple primary malignant neoplasms
Year: 2014 PMID: 25624886 PMCID: PMC4301539 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2014.2789
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1Photomicrographs of hematoxylin and eosin-stained specimens from the patient’s various carcinomas. (A) Grade III colonic adenocarcinoma (year, 1979); (B) grade II colonic adenocarcinoma (year, 1988); (C) well-differentiated endometrial adenocarcinoma (year, 1996); (D) colonic carcinoma (year, 1998); (E) canal papillary carcinoma of the right breast (year, 2004); (F) mushroom-like colonic adenocarcinoma (year, 2007); (G) colonic mucinous adenocarcinoma (year, 2011); (H) small intestinal mucinous adenocarcinoma (year, 2011). Within each figure part, the magnification of the left panel is ×100 and that of the right panel is ×400.