| Literature DB >> 28432678 |
Shun Sasaki1, Masahiko Sugiyama2, Yu Nakaji2,3, Ryota Nakanishi2, Yuichiro Nakashima2, Hiroshi Saeki2, Eiji Oki2, Yoshinao Oda3, Yoshihiko Maehara2.
Abstract
Anal metastasis of colorectal cancer is very rare and is usually associated with a history of anal disease, including anal fistula, fissure, hemorrhoidectomy, and anastomotic injury. We report a case of rectal cancer with a synchronous anal metastasis consisting of adenocarcinoma of squamous cells without a history of anal disease. A 60-year-old woman had a chief complaint of melena. She had a 1.5-cm anal tumor on the perianal skin, and a Bollman type 2 rectal tumor on the Ra portion was found on colonoscopy. Biopsy of both tumors revealed a similar histology of well- to moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma. There was no sign of metastases in lymph nodes or other organs. For the purpose of diagnosis and treatment, transperineal local resection of the anal tumor was performed, and it was histologically identified as adenocarcinoma of squamous cells with no invasion to muscles, lymph ducts, or microvessels. The pathological margin was free. Then, to achieve radical cure, laparoscopic low anterior resection (LAR) with D3 lymphadenectomy was performed. The histological diagnosis of the anal tumor was adenocarcinoma of squamous cells without invasion to muscles, lymph ducts, or vessels. The surgical margin was completely free. Immunohistochemical analysis of both tumors revealed similar staining patterns, and the final diagnosis was rectal cancer with metastasis to the anal skin. The patient received no postoperative therapy, and no recurrences have been observed 12 months after surgery. We expect that our sphincter-preserving surgical strategy provided a good prognosis for the synchronous rectal cancer and anal metastasis. This is a rare report of a case with an anal metastasis of colorectal cancer on perianal squamous cells without a history of anal disease that was resected while preserving anal function.Entities:
Keywords: Anal metastasis; Rectal cancer
Year: 2017 PMID: 28432678 PMCID: PMC5400771 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-017-0319-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Fig. 1Colonoscopy image of a rectal carcinoma. The rectal carcinoma easily bled, with an ulcer around an irregular mass 10 cm from the anal verge. Biopsy revealed this was a well- to moderately differentiated carcinoma
Fig. 2Colonoscopy image of an anal tumor. The tumor was a 1.0-cm irregular mass, displayed redness on the anal skin, and biopsy revealed the same histology as that of the rectal carcinoma
Fig. 3The anal tumor stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma was observed from the squamous epithelium to the submucosal tissue
Fig. 4Immunohistochemical staining of the rectal (a) and anal (b) carcinomas with cytokeratin (CK) 7 and 20. Both tumors were CK7-negative and CK20-positive
Reports of synchronous anal metastasis of colorectal cancer
| Author | Age/gender | Primary tumor | T | N | History of anal injury | Therapy | Prognosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tokuhara [ | 69/M | S | Ss | 0 | + | APR | NA |
| Yoshimura [ | 59/M | Ra | Ss | 1 | + | APR→CT | 43M |
| Shinohara [ | 36/M | Ra | Ss | 1 | + | LAR→LR | 6M |
| Shimoyama [ | 61/M | S | Ss | 1 | + | APR | 60M |
| Hyman [ | 66/M | S | Ss | 1 | + | APR | 12M |
| Mizutani [ | 63/F | Ra | A | 1 | − | PE→CT | 21M |
| Narita [ | 72/M | Rs | Si | 1 | − | APR→CT | NA |
| Zbar [ | 54/M | S | NA | NA | + | HAR+LR→CRT | 14M |
| Hamada [ | 61/M | S | mp | 0 | + | LAR→CT | 12M |
| Gupta [ | 44/M | D | Ss | 1 | + | CR+LR→CT | 36M |
| Ishiyama [ | 53/M | Ra | Ss | 1 | + | LAR→LR | 10M |
| Sandiford [ | 72/M | Rs | NA | 0 | + | LAR+LR→CRT | 14M |
| Morita [ | 61/M | S | Ss | 2 | − | LR→Hartmann→CT | 7M |
| Godai [ | 60/M | Rb | A | 1 | + | APR→CT | 28M |
| Watanabe [ | 68/M | Rs | Se | 1 | − | APR | 8M |
| Benjelloun [ | 68/M | Rs | mp | 0 | + | CRT→HAR+LR | 36M |
| Benjelloun [ | 55/M | Rs | Ss | 0 | − | CRT→HAR+LR | 36M |
| Gomes [ | 65/M | S | Ss | 0 | + | APR+CR | 3M |
| Present case | 60/F | Ra | Ss | 0 | − | LR→LAR | 12M |