go to The Japanese Society of Gastroenterological Surgery official site The Japanese Journal of Gastroenterological Surgery Online Journal
go to main navigation
go to Home
go to Current Issue
go to Past Issue
go to Article Search
Abstract go to Japanese page English
Vol.42 No.3 2009 March [Table of Contents] [Full text ( PDF 993KB)]
CASE REPORT

A Resected Case of Asynchronous Liver Metastasis from Rectal Carcinoid Tumor Limited to sm Invasion Twelve Years Later from Resection of the Primary

Tomoya Abe, Tetsuyuki Uchiyama, Taku Kitayama, Hidekazu Oishi, Satoshi Oda, Hideo Ise and Mika Watanabe*

Department of Surgery, Ishinomaki Municipal Hospital
Department of Pathology, Tohoku University Hospital*

A 58-year-old man admitted for a liver tumor 8 cm in diameter had had low anterior resection of the rectum for a carcinoid tumor 13 mm in diameter with invasion to the submucosal layer in 1994. Computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and angiography of the abdomen revealed a lobulated mass of 8 cm with tumor embolism of the portal vain in the right lobe of the liver. We diagnosed liver metastasis from the rectal carcinoid tumor on biopsy, conducting extended right hepatic lobectomy in February, 2006. Histologicaly, the tumor was metastasis from a rectal carcinoid. Liver metastasis from a rectal carcinoid less than 2 cm in diameter and limited to the submucosal layer is rare, with 32 cases, including ours, recorded. This is, to our knowledge, the first to be reported in Japan that recurred after such a long term as 12 years. We should be careful of the metachronous liver metastasis when we follow up treatment for rectal carcinoid.

Key words
carcinoid tumor, liver metastasis, hepatic resection

Jpn J Gastroenterol Surg 42: 305-310, 2009

Reprint requests
Tomoya Abe Department of Surgery, Ishinomaki Municipal Hospital
1-7-20 Minamihama-machi, Ishinomaki, 986-0835 JAPAN

Accepted
September 24, 2008

go to download site To read the PDF file you will need Abobe Reader installed on your computer.
return to the head of this page
back to main navigation
Copyright © The Japanese Society of Gastroenterological Surgery