Abstract

This study describes chest radiographic features of thoracic metastatic disease (TMD) in patients referred for colon cancer to a pediatric oncology hospital. The study group was comprised of 9 patients (7 males, 2 females, age 13-19 years) with serial chest radiographs demonstrating TMD from colon cancer. All patients had a chest radiograph performed within the 2 months prior to death. The median interval from diagnosis of colon cancer to appearance of radiographic TMD was 3 months. Four of nine patients had TMD at presentation, eight of nine patients within 2 years of diagnosis. All abnormalities progressed on serial radiographs. The median interval from appearance of radiographic abnormalities to death was 2 months. Radiographic findings included pleural effusions (n = 6), lymphadenopathy (n = 5), lymphangitic carcinomatosis (n = 4), solitary pulmonary nodule (n = 2), and lobar atelectasis (n = 1). Five patients with pleural effusions initially had right-sided effusions. Radiographic TMD in adolescents with colon cancer usually occurs within 2 years of diagnosis. Once TMD manifests, the prognosis is dismal. Findings include pleural effusions, lymphadenopathy, lymphangitic carcinomatosis, solitary pulmonary nodules, and lobar atelectasis. We suggest that metastatic colon carcinoma should be included in the differential diagnosis for lymphangitic spread of tumor in adolescents.

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