Abstract

The major sites of metastasis in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are bones, the brain, adrenal glands, the liver, the contralateral lung, and distant lymph nodes. Solitary metastasis in an uncommon site is very rare; therefore, it has not often been reported. Identifying whether a solitary lesion is a metastatic lesion is important because it decisively influences the stage and treatment decisions. We report a series of cases of NSCLC diagnosis with uncommon solitary metastasis. (1) A 71-year-old man was diagnosed with poorly differentiated NSCLC after a bronchoscopic biopsy of a tumor in the bronchus of the right middle lobe. A hypermetabolic lesion was observed in the tail of the pancreas using positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT), and metastasis of NSCLC was confirmed using endoscopic ultrasound fine-needle aspiration (EUS-FNA). (2) A 77-year-old man was diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma after a bronchoscopic biopsy of a tumor in the bronchus of the left upper lobe. A hypermetabolic lesion was observed in the bilateral lobes of the thyroid gland using PET/CT, and metastasis of the squamous cell carcinoma was confirmed by FNA and cytology. (3) A 79-year-old woman was diagnosed with adenocarcinoma by brushing cytology performed on the apicoposterior segmental bronchus of the left upper lobe. Hypermetabolic lesions were observed using PET/CT in the subcutaneous layer of the right back and the left breast, and metastases of adenocarcinoma were confirmed by biopsies in each lesion. These three patients were treated with platinum-based chemotherapy for stage IV lung cancer. With this case series, we recommend that, when a solitary lesion is observed in NSCLC patients, a tissue biopsy should be performed, even if the lesion is located in an organ where lung cancer metastasis is uncommon.

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