Abstract

The rare phenomenon of tumor-to-tumor metastasis was first described in 1930. The donor neoplasm is most frequently lung or breast carcinoma, whereas intracranial meningiomas are reportedly the commonest recipient neoplasm. Here we report a case of metastasis from a primary gastric cancer to a uterine lipoleiomyoma. A 65-year-old woman presented with locally advanced gastric cancer with computed tomography (CT) evidence of peritoneal dissemination and a 9 cm pelvic mass. She underwent 16 courses of TS-1/cisplatin chemotherapy, which achieved significant tumor reduction. However, repeat CT and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a 9 cm diameter pelvic mass adjacent to the uterus. The mass was heterogeneously hyperintense on T1- and T2-weighted images with some low signal spots on fat-suppressed T1-weighted images, suggesting a benign ovarian tumor such as a mature cystic teratoma. After 3 months, pelvic CT revealed a 10 cm multilocular cystic mass that exhibited heterogeneous enhancement after intravenous contrast administration. A diagnostic laparotomy revealed a subserosal uterine tumor extending into the right broad ligament; total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy was performed. The uterine tumor showed histological features of lipoleiomyoma infiltrated by well- to moderately differentiated carcinoma cells that were similar to those of the gastric biopsy, supporting a diagnosis of metastatic gastric adenocarcinoma.

Highlights

  • Other than by direct invasion from adjacent pelvic organs, metastasis of extragenital cancers to the uterus is uncommon

  • We present a case of gastric cancer that metastasized to a uterine lipoleiomyoma

  • Lipoleiomyoma of uterus is a rare variant of uterine leiomyoma, the incidence reportedly being 0.03% to 0.2% of all uterine tumors [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Other than by direct invasion from adjacent pelvic organs, metastasis of extragenital cancers to the uterus is uncommon. Metastases to uterine lipoleiomyomas, a rare variant of leiomyoma, are extremely rare. The rare phenomenon of metastases to histologically distinct tumors was first described in 1930 [1] and is known as tumor-totumor metastasis [2]. As for the recipient tumor, intracranial meningiomas are reportedly the commonest [2], whereas breast cancer is the commonest donor tumor [2]. We present a case of gastric cancer that metastasized to a uterine lipoleiomyoma

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