| Literature DB >> 29633044 |
Naoki Umezaki1, Daisuke Hashimoto2,3, Shigeki Nakagawa1, Takanobu Yamao1, Masayo Tsukamoto1, Yuki Kitano1, Kota Arima1, Kensuke Yamamura1, Tatsunori Miyata1, Hirohisa Okabe1, Akira Chikamoto1, Fujio Matsumura4, Hideo Baba1.
Abstract
Gastrointestinal tract metastasis from pancreatic cancer is quite rare. We present the case of a 58-year-old male patient who underwent distal pancreatectomy for pancreatic body cancer 5 years prior. Four years after the initial operation, a 15-mm cystic submucosal tumor was found in the antrum of the stomach. Because the tumor had grown to 25 mm and the level of carcinoembryonic antigen in the cystic fluid derived by ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy was high, partial resection of the stomach was performed 5 years after the distal pancreatectomy. Pathological diagnosis was gastric metastasis of pancreatic cancer. The patient has been alive without recurrence for 13 months after the resection of the cystic tumor. We are not aware of any similar cases of cystic gastric metastasis from pancreatic cancer published in the English literature.Entities:
Keywords: Chemotherapy; Metastasis; Operation; Pancreatic cancer; Submucosal tumor
Year: 2018 PMID: 29633044 PMCID: PMC5891441 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-018-0443-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Fig. 1Preoperative imaging of the primary pancreatic cancer. Enhanced computed tomography (CT) showed a 30-mm solid tumor in the tail of the pancreas (a, arrowheads). Positron emission tomography–CT showed abnormal accumulation in the tumor (b, arrowheads). There was no gastric before the initial surgery (c)
Fig. 2Pathological findings of the primary pancreatic cancer. Macroscopically, the size of the primary pancreatic cancer was 3.9 × 2.6 cm (a, b). Microscopically, pathological diagnosis was moderately > well-differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma (c)
Fig. 3Preoperative imaging of the cystic tumor in the gastric antrum. Enhanced CT showed a 15-mm cystic lesion of the gastric antrum (a, arrowheads) 4 years after the initial operation. Six months later, the cystic lesion had grown up to 25 mm (b, arrowheads). Endoscopy revealed no epithelial lesion (c, arrowheads). Endoscopic ultrasonography showed a submucosal tumor (d)
Fig. 4Operative findings of the cystic tumor in the gastric antrum. Laparotomy showed the cystic tumor at the anterior wall of the stomach (a). Partial gastrectomy was performed, and the defect of the stomach was closed (b)
Fig. 5Pathological findings of the cystic gastric metastasis. Macroscopically, there was a 25-mm round cystic tumor (a, b). Microscopically, the cystic tumor existed in the submucosal layer (c). The tumor comprised tubular adenocarcinoma cells (d). Invasion of the adenocarcinoma cells did not reach the epithelium