CASE REPORT
A Case of Metastatic Rectal Cancer after Surgery for Gastric Cancer: Diagnosis using Loss of Heterozygosity Analysis
Daisuke Kitamura1)2), Motomi Nasu1), Hirohiko Yamaguchi1), Shinya Okamura1), Tadamitsu Yamasaki1), Kazuhiro Sakamoto2), Toshiki Kamano2) and Hiroaki Fujii3)
Department of Surgery, Saitama Soka Hospital1)
Department of Coloproctological Surgery2) and Department of Pathology II3), Juntendo University, School of Medicine
A 65-year-old man with gastric cancer underwent distal gastrectomy in November 2001, i.e., radical D2 resection with curability A. Histopathological findings were tub2, type2, mp, ly1, v1, and n0. In October 2003, he suffered melena. Colonoscopy showed a semicircular type
2' tumor 6 cm from the anal verge. Biopsy results showed moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma that developed more rapidly than expected for primary rectal cancer, suggesting metastatic rectal cancer. Specimens of resected gastric cancer and biopsied rectal cancer tissues compared using loss of heterozygosity (LOH) analysis showed patterns to be consistent between samples, yielding a diagnosis of rectal cancer metastatic after surgery for gastric cancer. In November 2003, further surgery was attempted, but resection was not possible, so colostomy was conducted. Postoperatively, he was treated with TS-1/CDDP chemotherapy and followed up, but died of hepatic failure in September 2004. LOH analysis was very useful in determining whether the cancer was primary or metastatic.
Key words
gastric cancer, metastatic cancer of the rectum, loss of heterozygosity (LOH)
Jpn J Gastroenterol Surg 39: 1643-1648, 2006
Reprint requests
Daisuke Kitamura Department of Coloproctological Surgery, Juntendo University, School of Medicine
2-1-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, 113-8421 JAPAN
Accepted
March 22, 2006
|
To read the PDF file you will need Abobe Reader installed on your computer. |
|