| Literature DB >> 30155335 |
Jun Takahashi1, Shingo Tsujinaka1, Nao Kakizawa1, Noriya Takayama1, Erika Machida1, Kazuki Iseya1, Fumi Hasegawa1, Rina Kikugawa1, Yasuyuki Miyakura1, Koichi Suzuki1, Toshiki Rikiyama1.
Abstract
Recent advancements in multimodal therapy can provide oncologic benefits for patients with recurrent colorectal cancer. This report presents a case of locoregionally recurrent appendiceal cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgical resection with vascular reconstruction. A 68-year-old Japanese woman was diagnosed with appendiceal cancer and underwent ileocecal resection. The pathological evaluation revealed KRAS-mutant adenocarcinoma with the final stage of T4bN1M0. She received oral fluorouracil-based adjuvant chemotherapy. One year later, she was found to have peritoneal dissemination in the pelvic cavity and vaginal metastasis. She received an oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy followed by surgical resection. One year after the second surgery, she developed a locoregional recurrence involving the right external iliac vessels and small intestine. She received an irinotecan-based regimen with bevacizumab as neoadjuvant chemotherapy, followed by surgical resection. At first, a femoro-femoral bypass was made to secure the blood supply to the right lower extremities. Subsequently, an en bloc resection including the recurrent tumor and the external iliac vessels was completed. Surgical resection for recurrent colorectal cancer is often technically challenging because of the tumor location and invasion to adjacent organs. In this case, a surgical approach with persistent chemotherapy achieved oncologic resection of locoregionally recurrent appendiceal cancer.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30155335 PMCID: PMC6098845 DOI: 10.1155/2018/1674279
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Surg
Figure 1Ultrasonography showing a 27 × 16 mm, irregular, low-echoic tumor (arrow). The tumor is located around the external iliac artery (a) and the external iliac vein (b).
Figure 2Contrast-enhanced CT scan showing an irregular tumor around the right external iliac vessels and the small intestine, contiguous to the small intestine (arrow).
Figure 3PET-CT showing intense tracer uptake (SUV max: 17.5) at the tumor (arrow).
Figure 4A femoro-femoral arterial bypass was performed, followed by an en bloc tumor resection. (a) The fixed solid tumor (∗) at the right inguinal fossa. The tumor involved the external iliac artery, external iliac vein (arrowhead), ileum (arrow), and right obturator lymph nodes. The broken lines with blue color indicate the proximal and distal resection margins of the bowel. The broken lines with black-colored circle indicate the resection margin of the vessels. (b) Surgical specimen of the resection tumor (∗) that invaded, including both the external iliac artery and vein (arrowhead) as well as the small intestine.