Abstract

BackgroundWe report a unique case of synchronous sacrococcygeal chordoma in association with rectal invasive adenocarcinoma. Retrorectal tumors are a rare disease caused by a variety of pathologies. To our knowledge, no prior cases of such a coincidental finding of both cancers have been reported in the literature.Case presentationThis is the case of a 74-year-old white middle eastern man, with known hypertension under treatment, who presented with complaints of progressive lower back pain associated with urinary incontinence over the past 12 months. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the pelvis showed a large midline, well-defined, oval-shaped lesion replacing the sacrococcygeal portion of the spine, with extension to the presacral region. Computed tomography (CT)-guided Tru-Cut biopsy revealed features suggestive of chordoma. At surgery, we performed excision of the entire mass en bloc, sacrectomy with rectus abdominis myocutaneous flap reconstruction and end sigmoid colostomy. Surgical histopathology proved it to be sacral dedifferentiated chordoma and rectal invasive adenocarcinoma. Overall, the patient recovered well postoperatively, was discharged home with functional stoma and on permanent Foley catheter use.ConclusionTo the best of our knowledge, this is the only reported case of such a presentation, and sheds light on the approach and management. We hope that reporting such a case will add value to the medical literature.

Highlights

  • We report a unique case of synchronous sacrococcygeal chordoma in association with rectal invasive adenocarcinoma

  • Sacrectomy was performed and the tumor with its attachment to the rectum was removed in one specimen

  • Retrorectal tumors are a rare disease with a variety of pathologies occurring in a potential space between the rectum and sacrum [4]

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Summary

Introduction

We report a unique case of synchronous sacrococcygeal chordoma in association with rectal invasive adenocarcinoma. They involve the sacrococcygeal region in 50–60% of cases and account for over 40% of all sacral tumors [2]. *Correspondence: mamalshehri@gmail.com 2 King Saud Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Full list of author information is available at the end of the article He underwent investigations at a local hospital; the computed tomography (CT) scan showed a sacrococcygeal mass suggestive of chordoma.

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