Abstract

Villous adenoma is a common lesion of the gastrointestinal tract, but it is rare in the ureter. Thus, as far as we know, only one case limited to this location has been described. Intestinal metaplasia of the urothelium is not rare. However, only one case of gastric metaplasia with pseudopyloric glands has been described in the literature. We here report in detail on a tubulovillous adenoma of the ureter associated with diffuse gastric and intestinal metaplasia and a concurrent primary, solid, high grade transitional cell carcinoma, with extensive clear cell change, in a 56-year-old male patient. He had undergone a left nephrectomy for renal tuberculosis twenty years earlier, and the lesions developed in the ureteric stump. To the best of our knowledge, such a combination of lesions has not been reported previously either in the ureter or in the rest of the urinary tract. The coexistence of diverse lesions in our case might represent the pluripotentiality of the urothelium in association with chronic inflammation and neoplastic induction. The present report also emphasizes the metaplastic and malignant potential of a defunctioned urothelial structure. This case is of particular interest, because these coexistent lesions arose simultaneously with an anatomically separate adenocarcinoma of the rectum (Dukes' B). The patient died 76 days after admission. The dismal prognosis of our case was determined by the advanced anatomical stage and the histological high grade of the transitional cell carcinoma of the ureter.

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