Brain and bone marrow metastases from rectal cancer

Despite the development of new treatment options based on the molecular characterization of colorectal cancer, 20% of patients present de novo metastatic disease, whereas 30-40% of patients who receive curative treatment relapse during follow up. Herein, we report 2 cases with rectal cancer that dev...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of gastroenterology 2020-01, Vol.33 (1), p.95-97
Hauptverfasser: Thomopoulou, Konstantina, Manolakou, Stavroula, Messaritakis, Ippokratis, Tzardi, Maria, Lagoudaki, Eleni, Koutsopoulos, Anastasios, Koulouris, Andreas, Kanellis, George, Kalbakis, Konstantinos, Mavroudis, Dimitris, Souglakos, Ioannis
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container_issue 1
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container_title Annals of gastroenterology
container_volume 33
creator Thomopoulou, Konstantina
Manolakou, Stavroula
Messaritakis, Ippokratis
Tzardi, Maria
Lagoudaki, Eleni
Koutsopoulos, Anastasios
Koulouris, Andreas
Kanellis, George
Kalbakis, Konstantinos
Mavroudis, Dimitris
Souglakos, Ioannis
description Despite the development of new treatment options based on the molecular characterization of colorectal cancer, 20% of patients present de novo metastatic disease, whereas 30-40% of patients who receive curative treatment relapse during follow up. Herein, we report 2 cases with rectal cancer that developed uncommon sites of metastasis; the first patient had an isolated breast metastasis, while the second patient developed bone marrow infiltration with synchronous brain metastases. In order to evaluate the uncommon metastatic pattern of rectal cancer, we detected and enumerated circulating tumor cells (CTCs) using both immunofluorescence and real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in these patients' peripheral blood. The procedure revealed the presence of CTCs, positive for CEACAM5 but negative for epithelial phenotype (EpCAM-), that might explain the patients' metastatic potential and survival.
doi_str_mv 10.20524/aog.2019.0423
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title Brain and bone marrow metastases from rectal cancer
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