Abstract

Introduction Abdominal wall masses are a common finding in clinical practice. A high percentage of these masses are malignant. We present the case of a patient operated for a gallbladder adenocarcinoma, who consulted eleven years later for a malignant mass of the abdominal wall in synchrony with two adenocarcinomas of the left colon and sigmoid. Case Report. A 75-year-old male underwent a laparoscopic cholecystectomy with an incidental diagnosis of adenocarcinoma in situ (TisN0M0 according to AJCC 8th edition). The operative report mentioned that the removal of the gallbladder was difficult due to the inflammatory process, and the gallbladder was accidentally opened during the operation. It was not clear from the operative report whether an extraction bag was utilized to remove the specimen, but the histopathological study confirmed an open gallbladder. He presented 11 years later with an asymptomatic heterogeneous complex cystic mass involving the anterior rectus abdominis muscle. Colonoscopy showed synchronous tumors in the descending and sigmoid colon with pathology confirming adenocarcinoma. The patient underwent an elective laparotomy with resection of the anterior abdominal wall mass, left hemicolectomy, and sigmoidectomy. The histopathological results of the abdominal mass (CK7, CK20, EMA, CEA positive) were described as metastasis of adenocarcinoma of biliary origin. Discussion. Port site recurrences are rare complications following laparoscopic surgery when malignancy is unsuspected. Possible factors related to local implantation include direct seeding of spilled bile or tumor cells into the wound or shedding of tumor cells due to pneumoperitoneum-induced loss of the peritoneal barrier at the trocar site. In the absence of distant metastasis, treatment should include wide port site excision with malignancy-free surgical margins. Conclusion Abdominal wall metastasis from gallbladder carcinoma is rare, and its synchronous presentation with a malignant neoplasm of the colon is exceptional. This is the first report of a patient with abdominal wall metastasis from a gallbladder adenocarcinoma operated eleven years ago that debuted synchronously with two adenocarcinomas of the left colon and sigma.

Highlights

  • Abdominal wall masses are a common finding in clinical practice

  • We present the first report of a patient with a metastatic mass in the abdominal wall from a gallbladder adenocarcinoma

  • Case Reports in Surgery operated on eleven years earlier by laparoscopic cholecystectomy, who presented with a synchronous sigmoid and descending colon adenocarcinoma

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Summary

Introduction

Abdominal wall masses are a common finding in clinical practice and up to 42.2% can be malignant [1]. The patient’s history, physical examination, and imaging tests play an important role in the differential diagnosis. In most cases, the definitive diagnosis is made pathologically following surgical excision. Case Reports in Surgery operated on eleven years earlier by laparoscopic cholecystectomy, who presented with a synchronous sigmoid and descending colon adenocarcinoma. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the standard operation for symptomatic cholelithiasis and other benign gallbladder diseases [2, 3]. The increase in the number of laparoscopic surgical procedures has led to the discovery of an increased number of incidental gallbladder carcinomas at an early stage [2]. Histopathological examination reveals an incidental carcinoma in approximately 1-2% of patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy [3,4,5]. The association between gallbladder polyps and adenomatous colon polyps is well known and will be discussed

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