Atypical presentation of an oesophageal carcinoma with metastases to the left buttock: A case report

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Abstract

Introduction: Oesophageal carcinomas represent 3% of all cancers in the UK accounting for 7650 new cases per annum. Oesophageal cancer may be associated with swallowing abnormalities, localised mass pressure effects, lymphatic or distant metastatic spread. Case presentation: We report a 50-year-old man who presented with a painful, enlarging, solid, fixed lesion adjacent to the left buttock with associated dysphagia. Initial endoscopic assessment suggested severe oesophageal inflammation while the lesion in the buttock area was presumed to be a primary soft-tissue neoplasm. However, subsequent histological assessment confirmed a primary oesophageal squamous carcinoma with metastatic spread to the buttock. Conclusion: We discuss the clinical presentation, investigative modalities, and current therapeutic guidelines associated with this rare metastasis and present other atypical oesophageal musculoskeletal metastases. We emphasise the need to consider all aspects of patient symptomatology during the investigation of any atypical lesion. © 2009 Smyth et al; licensee Cases Network Ltd.

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Smyth, S., O’Donnell, M. E., Kumar, S., Hussain, A., & Cranley, B. (2009). Atypical presentation of an oesophageal carcinoma with metastases to the left buttock: A case report. Cases Journal, 2(5). https://doi.org/10.1186/1757-1626-2-6691

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