| Literature DB >> 35832473 |
Yoshifumi Watanabe1, Rei Suzuki1, Mitsuru Kinoshita1, Masashi Hirota1.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer commonly metastasizes to the regional lymph nodes, liver, lungs and peritoneum. At present, mediastinal lymph node metastasis from colorectal cancer is uncommon and poorly understood. The present study reported a case of solitary anterior mediastinal lymph node metastasis with pericardial invasion from transverse colon cancer. An 82-year-old woman had a history of colectomy with regional lymph node dissection for transverse colon cancer (T1N1bM0 stage IIIA in the UICC classification). The patient had no symptoms, but follow-up contrast-enhanced computed tomography revealed an anterior mediastinal tumor compressing the heart 18 months after colectomy. The tumor showed fluorodeoxyglucose uptake on positron emission tomography. Resection of the anterior mediastinal tumor with pericardiectomy was performed. The tumor was 35x25 mm in size and was histopathologically characterized to be adenocarcinoma. These cells expressed cytokeratin (CK)20 and caudal-type homeobox protein 2 but not CK7 and thyroid transcription factor 1 on immunohistochemical analysis, confirming a diagnosis of metachronous mediastinal metastasis originating from colon cancer. The tumor cells invaded the adjacent pericardium and diaphragm pathologically. The patient has lived without recurrence 8 months after the surgery for mediastinal metastasis. In conclusion, clinicians should consider metastasis to the mediastinum during follow-up in patients with colorectal cancer. Surgery may be the most reliable treatment for solitary anterior mediastinal lymph node metastasis, preventing carcinomatous pericarditis through direct pericardial invasion. Copyright: © Watanabe et al.Entities:
Keywords: colorectal cancer; mediastinum; metastasis; recurrence; surgery
Year: 2022 PMID: 35832473 PMCID: PMC9264321 DOI: 10.3892/mco.2022.2561
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Clin Oncol ISSN: 2049-9450
Figure 1Macro- and microscopic examinations of the resected primary transverse colon cancer. (A) A 40-mm sized tumor in the transverse colon. (B) Histopathological findings of primary colon cancer revealed a well-differentiated adenocarcinoma which proliferated invasively with glandular formation. Hematoxylin and eosin staining. Scale bar, 100 µm.
Figure 2Computed tomography images. Axial images acquired using contrast-enhanced computed tomography (A) before colectomy, (B) six months after colectomy and (C) twelve months after colectomy. (D) Anterior mediastinal tumor compressing the heart 18 months after colectomy (indicated by arrow).
Figure 3Positron emission tomography images. The tumor showed fluorodeoxyglucose uptake with a standardized uptake value of 16.5 (indicated by arrow).
Figure 4Histopathological examination of the resected mediastinal tumor. (A) A 35x25-mm sized mediastinal tumor. (B) Tumor was identified using hematoxylin and eosin staining as adenocarcinoma which proliferated invasively with glandular formation in microscopic examination. (C) Tumor cells expressed brown stain, which indicated CK20 immunohistochemistry. (D) Tumor cells presented a lack of brown stain, which indicated CK7 immunohistochemistry.Scale bars, 100 µm. CK, cytokeratin.