Abstract

Pancreatic metastasis from several malignancies are increasingly encountered in clinical practice, and the usefulness of surgical resection has been suggested for certain neoplasms. Isolated pancreatic metastasis from malignant melanoma is a rare occurrence, and the role of surgery as an adjunct to systemic therapy for melanoma metastatic to a solitary or multiple sites is still debated. We report a patient with melanoma of unknown primary site metastatic simultaneously to the lung and pancreas 3years after axillary lymph node dissection. Distal pancreatectomy with splenectomy and video thoracoscopic assisted resection of pulmonary metastasis were performed. The postoperative course was uneventful, but 6months after surgery, the patient experienced single pulmonary recurrence. During chemotherapy with different drugs, pulmonary lesion remained stable for 1year, and no abdominal recurrence occurred. After then, the size of the lesion progressively increased and a second metastasis occurred in the lung. Five months later, brain metastases occurred, and the patients died 24months after surgery. Sixteen pancreatic resections for metastatic malignant melanoma, reported with adequate clinical details, were also retrieved from the literature. In spite of the very limited experience, it appears that surgical resection is only a palliative procedure, because long-term survival is a rare event. However, considering the lack of effective systemic therapy, surgery may be considered as a part of an aggressive multidisciplinary approach in selected cases with malignant melanoma metastatic to single or multiple visceral sites.

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