Rectal metastasis from lobular breast carcinoma 15 years after primary diagnosis

Lobular breast carcinoma represents 2–20% of infiltrative carcinomas of the breast. The incidence of extrahepatic gastrointestinal (GI) tract metastases observed in necropsy studies varies from 6% to 18% and the most commonly affected organ is the stomach, followed by colon and rectum [1–4]. Reporte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical & translational oncology 2010-02, Vol.12 (2), p.150-153
Hauptverfasser: López Deogracias, Maite, Flores Jaime, Laura, Arias-Camisón, Iñaki, Zamacola, Ilde, Murillo Guibert, Jesús, Suescun García, Rosa, Querejeta Usabiaga, Juan, Martínez García, Francisco
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Lobular breast carcinoma represents 2–20% of infiltrative carcinomas of the breast. The incidence of extrahepatic gastrointestinal (GI) tract metastases observed in necropsy studies varies from 6% to 18% and the most commonly affected organ is the stomach, followed by colon and rectum [1–4]. Reported herein is the case of a 67-year-old woman who was primarily diagnosed and surgically treated for a lobular carcinoma of the breast 15 years ago and is now referred with back pain and right hydronephrosis caused by a metastasis in rectum. Frequently, the absence of specific symptoms of digestive metastases of breast cancer leads to a misdiagnosis of this pathology [5–7]. The treatment will be based on a detailed clinical history and histopathological findings. Metastases from breast cancer in GI tract tumours must be excluded in a patient with previous history of breast carcinoma, as in the case reported herein.
ISSN:1699-048X
1699-3055
DOI:10.1007/S12094-010-0481-0