| Literature DB >> 28626261 |
Itaru Shigeyoshi1, Koji Komori1, Takashi Kinoshita1, Taihei Oshiro1, Seiji Ito1, Tetsuya Abe1, Yoshiki Senda1, Kazunari Misawa1, Yuichi Ito1, Norihisa Uemura1, Seiji Natsume1, Jiro Kawakami1, Akira Ouchi1, Masayuki Tsutsuyama1, Takahiro Hosoi1, Tomoyuki Akazawa1, Daisuke Hayashi1, Hideharu Tanaka1, Yasushi Yatabe2, Yasuhiro Shimizu1.
Abstract
Metachronous ovarian metastasis of colorectal adenocarcinoma is mostly identified within 3 years. Here we present a case of a 64-year-old woman with cecal cancer who underwent right oophorectomy for ovarian metastasis. Imaging was performed because of abdominal bloating; it detected a swollen right ovary with ascites. On laparotomy, a right ovarian tumor and cecal cancer were identified. After right oophorectomy, a diagnosis of unilateral ovarian metastasis from colon cancer was made. One month later, right hemicolectomy was performed. Eight years after initial surgery, the patient presented with vaginal bleeding. A computed tomography (CT) scan revealed a pelvic mass approximately 10 cm in diameter, but no mass was evident on a CT image taken 6 months before. The patient was diagnosed with left ovarian metastasis from colon cancer. A third laparotomy revealed a left ovarian tumor, but there was no evidence of other metastases or peritoneal dissemination. Left oophorectomy was performed. Oophorectomy is considered to be associated with a survival benefit in ovarian metastasis without other extensive metastasis. However, ovarian metastasis is often bilateral. Although complete resection was achieved in the present case, the findings support performing prophylactic bilateral oophorectomy if metastasis is identified in a unilateral ovary.Entities:
Keywords: colon cancer; metachronous ovarian metastasis; prophylactic bilateral oophorectomy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28626261 PMCID: PMC5472551 DOI: 10.18999/nagjms.79.2.259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nagoya J Med Sci ISSN: 0027-7622 Impact factor: 1.131