| Literature DB >> 31938620 |
Shamsuddin M Anwar1, Deepak P Kalbi2, Astha Upadhyaya3, Anum Aqsa1, Indraneil Mukherjee4.
Abstract
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is a common tumor of the kidneys that can often metastasize to other organs, including the lungs, brain, bones, and adrenal glands. However, colon involvement is less common, with metastasis to the rectum and anal canal being an extremely rare phenomenon. The present study describes patients with renal cell carcinoma metastasizing to this unusual location in the gastrointestinal tract (GI).Entities:
Keywords: metastasis; metastatic anal cancer; renal cell carcinoma
Year: 2019 PMID: 31938620 PMCID: PMC6948093 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.6330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Summary of the reported cases
| Patient | Stage of renal cell carcinoma at the time of diagnosis | Time after initial diagnosis | Chemotherapy/immunotherapy prior to presentation with rectal metastasis | Symptoms at the time of presentation with rectal metastasis | Metastatic status at the time of diagnosis of rectal metastasis |
| 1 | Stage 4 | 9 years | Chemotherapy with interferon, 5-fluorouracil, floxuridine, and thalidomide | Painful bleeding and anal mass | Brain, duodenum, lungs [ |
| 2 | Stage 4 | 9 months | None | Hematochezia and acute anemia | None [ |
| 3 | Not defined | 28 years | Immunotherapy with interleukin-2 and interferon alpha | Hematochezia and acute anemia | Brain, duodenum, lungs [ |
| 4 | Stage 3 | 7 years | None | Anal mass | Lung, small bowel mesentery [ |
| 5 | Stage 3 | 9 years | None | Hematochezia, nausea, vomiting, change in stool caliber | Retroperitoneal (left psoas muscle) [ |
| 6 | Not defined | Not described | Chemotherapy with sunitinib | Hematochezia and acute anemia | Lung and lymph nodes [ |
| 7 | Not defined | 10 years | Chemotherapy with sunitinib | Incidental rectal mass on colonoscopy | None [ |
| 8 | Stage 3 | Same time | None | Painless hematochezia | None [ |