| Literature DB >> 34055288 |
Selim Zaghbib1, Marouene Chakroun1, Ahmed Saadi1, Hamza Boussaffa1, Nadia Znaidi2, Soumaya Rammeh2, Haroun Ayed1, Mohamed Chebil1.
Abstract
Cancers of extra bladder origin represent between 2 and 12% of bladder neoplasms and are most often secondary to contiguous bladder invasion. Metastasis from distant organs is exceptional, especially from pulmonary adenocarcinoma with <10 cases identified over the last 20 years. We report here a new case of a 55-year-old patient with a recently diagnosed pulmonary adenocarcinoma referred to the urology department for macroscopic hematuria. Computed tomography scan showed, in addition to the lung mass of the right lower lobe with a right mediastinal adenopathy, a thickening of the right lateral bladder wall. Cystoscopy showed inflammatory lesions on the bladder mucosa, which biopsy with immunohistochemical examination revealed to be tumoral proliferation in the lamina propria realizing the same immunohistochemical profile of the primary lung tumor (CK7+/TTF1+/CK20-/PSA-). The patient was treated with palliative platinum-based chemotherapy and unfortunately died 5 months after diagnosis. Published by Oxford University Press and JSCR Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34055288 PMCID: PMC8159194 DOI: 10.1093/jscr/rjab195
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2042-8812
Figure 1
Thickening of the right lateral wall of the bladder enhancing at arterial time on CT scan (arrow).
Figure 2
Peroperative appearance during cystoscopy before resection. Star: healthy bladder mucosa. Arrow: bullous inflammatory lesion that was resected.
Figure 3
Urothelial mucosa (arrow) with carcinomatous proliferation (star) composed of nodules within a sparse fibrous stroma (hematoxylin and eosin [HE] ×100).
Figure 4
(a) Carcinomatous proliferation consisting of globular cells with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm and a large nucleolus (HE ×250). (b) Diffuse nuclear staining of tumor cells by anti-TTF1.