A case of lung metastasis from gastric cancer presenting as ground-glass opacity dominant nodules

Most metastatic lung tumors present as solid nodules on chest computed tomography (CT). In contrast, ground-glass opacity on chest computed tomography usually suggests low-grade malignant lesions such as adenocarcinoma in situ or atypical adenomatous hyperplasia of the lung. A 75-year-old woman with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cardiothoracic surgery 2024-06, Vol.19 (1), p.365-5, Article 365
Hauptverfasser: Niimi, Takahiro, Samejima, Joji, Koike, Yutaro, Miyoshi, Tomohiro, Tane, Kenta, Aokage, Keiju, Taki, Tetsuro, Ishii, Genichiro, Tsuboi, Masahiro
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Most metastatic lung tumors present as solid nodules on chest computed tomography (CT). In contrast, ground-glass opacity on chest computed tomography usually suggests low-grade malignant lesions such as adenocarcinoma in situ or atypical adenomatous hyperplasia of the lung. A 75-year-old woman with a history of gastric cancer surgery approximately 5 years prior was referred to the Department of Thoracic Surgery at our hospital because of two newly appearing pulmonary ground-glass opacity-dominant nodules on chest computed tomography. She had two ground-glass opacities in the right lower lobe, one in the S6 segment was 12 mm and the other in the S10 segment was 8 mm. On chest computed tomography 15 months prior to referral, the lesion in the S6 segment was 8 mm, and the lesion in the S10 segment was 2 mm. She was suspected to have primary lung cancer and underwent wide-wedge resection of the nodule in the S6 segment. In the resected specimen, polygonal tumor cells infiltrated the alveolar septa, with some tumor cells exhibiting signet ring cell morphology. Based on morphological similarities to the tumor cells of previous gastric cancers and the results of immunostaining, the patient was diagnosed with lung metastases of gastric cancer. Pulmonary nodules in patients with a history of cancer in other organs, even if ground-glass opacity is predominant, should also be considered for the possibility of metastatic pulmonary tumors if they are growing rapidly.
ISSN:1749-8090
1749-8090
DOI:10.1186/s13019-024-02860-2