| Literature DB >> 30513496 |
Ashley Jones1, Madison R Kocher2, Ashlee Justice3, Fernando Navarro4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: A colonic metastasis from infiltrating breast ductal carcinoma is a rare phenomenon in the literature, especially in a male. PRESENTATION OF CASE: We present a rare case of a 55-year-old male with a past medical history of breast cancer who presented with signs and symptoms of appendicitis. A computed tomography (CT) scan revealed acute appendicitis in addition to a 2.3 cm cecal mass that correlated with a hypermetabolic region on positron emission testing (PET) the previous year. Analysis of a previously biopsied axillary lymph node demonstrated infiltrating ductal carcinoma. After an appendectomy and a right hemicolectomy were performed, pathologic analysis of the specimen revealed metastatic ductal carcinoma to the cecum. DISCUSSION: Gastrointestinal metastases of breast carcinoma are rare with colonic metastases occurring in approximately 3% of these cases. At the time of diagnosis of these colonic metastases, the disease is often times multifocal in the gastrointestinal tract. Solitary gastrointestinal metastases are less common than both secondary primaries and benign processes. Biopsies obtained during colonoscopy are often non-diagnostic, mandating surgical excision and pathologic examination.Entities:
Keywords: Breast carcinoma; Case report; Colonic metastases; Ductal carcinoma; Male breast carcinoma; Metastatic breast carcinoma
Year: 2018 PMID: 30513496 PMCID: PMC6280009 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijscr.2018.11.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2210-2612
Fig. 1PET-CT scan of chest, abdomen, and pelvis. Coronal reformatted image obtained 90 min after IV administration of 14.0 mCi of F18-FDG demonstrating a solitary focus of intense activity noted within the cecum with a maximum standardized uptake value of 9.6 (denoted by the blue arrow). At the time, this was suspicious for a colonic primary tumor.
Fig. 2PET-CT scan of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis. Axial slice of the same PET-CT scan demonstrating the same hypermetabolic focus in the cecum (demonstrated by the blue arrow).
Fig. 3Abdominal CT image at admission with IV and oral contrast. Multiple contiguous axial images of the abdomen and pelvis were obtained following the administration of intravenous and oral contrast. The appendix is dilated to 1.8 cm with significant periappendiceal stranding and appendiceal wall thickening (blue arrow). Also in the right lower quadrant, either adjacent to or within the wall of the cecum, is a bowel mass measuring 2.3 × 1.9 × 2.3 cm, concerning for a malignancy (demonstrated by the red arrow).
Fig. 4Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stain at 40x magnification demonstrating the tumor from the colectomy specimen (green arrow) within the submucosa with an overlying, benign colonic mucosa (red arrow).
Fig. 5Histological examination. The following findings demonstrate invasive ductal breast carcinoma. A. Nests of tumor cells with basophilic mucin production (H&E of colon tumor, 100x magnification). B. Tumor composed of cords and nests of epithelial cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm and prominent nucleoli (H&E stain of colon tumor, 400× magnification). C. Positive nuclear staining for Gata3 (Gata3 immunohistochemical stain, 200× magnification). D. Negative for CDX2 (CDX2 immunohistochemical stain, 200× magnification).
Published cases with treatment regimens and survival after the diagnosis of metastatic disease.
| Case | Patient description | Original diagnosis | Metastases | Treatment of metastases | Survival after metastatic diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uygun et al. [ | 43 year old female | Ductal and lobular mixed type carcinoma | Bone metastases and colonic metastasis found 3 years later | 6 cycles of chemotherapy (5-fluorouracil, Adriamycin, and cyclophosphadmide), followed by megestrol acetate | Alive 7 months after the diagnosis of colonic metastases |
| Dar et al. [ | 75-year-old female | Comedo-type intraductal carcinoma | Distal sigmoid colon metastasis found 6 years later | Rectosigmoidectomy | Not reported |
| Tsujimura et al. [ | 51-year-old female | Invasive lobular carcinoma of the breast | Ascending colon tumor found concurrently | Ileocecal resection and letrozole | Stable disease 9 months postoperatively |
| Klein and Sherlock [ | 68-year-old female | Infiltrating lobular carcinoma | Stomach, mesentery, and sigmoid colon | Estrogen and prednisone therapy in addition to surgical resection of metastases | 1 week (although diffuse metastatic disease prior) |
| 77-year-old female | Carcinoma | Stomach and sigmoid | Radiotherapy and estrogen therapy | “discharged for long term care” | |
| Gifaldi et al. [ | 86-year-old female | Infiltrating lobular carcinoma | Colon | Tamoxifen | Not reported |
| Clavien et al. [ | 49-year-old female | Infiltrating lobular and ductal carcinoma | Stomach and peritoneal carcinomatosis | None | 4 months |
| 82-year-old female | Infiltrating lobular carcinoma | Rectum | Tamoxifen | Alive after 18 months | |
| 62-year-old female | Infiltrating lobular and ductal carcinoma | Retroperitoneal and peritoneal carcinomatosis | Intraperitoneal 5-fluorouracil and tamoxifen | 6 months | |
| 52-year-old female | Infiltrating lobular carcinoma | Retroperitoneal and peritoneal carcinomatosis | Adnexectomy, chlorambucil, methotrexate, 5-fluorouracil, epirubicine, tamoxifine | Alive after 7 years | |
| Koos and Field [ | 52-year-old female | Infiltrating lobular carcinoma | Colon | Total colectomy | 10 months |
| Weisbert [ | 69-year-old female | Infiltrating lobular carcinoma | Colon and mesentery | Refused | 2 years |