This male patient presented with a scrotal abscess and urinary obstruction. The patient’s history included a perineal abscess and the development of urethrocutaneous fistulae (watering-can perineum). He underwent multiple debridement procedures without resolution. During the fifth debridement for Fournier’s gangrene, a biopsy revealed invasive squamous cell carcinoma. The patient was bedridden because of the large mass, a wide en bloc resection with lymphadenectomy and reconstruction was performed revealing a large (22 cm) squamous cell carcinoma originating from the urethra. He also received palliative chemoradiotherapy and hip hemiarthroplasty. Unfortunately, he succumbed to the disease. Given the recognized relationship between inflammation and the development of cancer, it is important to entertain a differential diagnosis of cancer, especially with erosive infections. This case report highlights the all too common late presentation of urethral cancer. Interestingly, despite correction of the bedridden state with palliative surgery, the patient did not perceive an improvement in quality of life based on the FACT-G questionnaire.
CITATION STYLE
Moore, S. J., Rashidipour, O., & Moore, R. B. (2016). Primary metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the male urethra presenting with scrotal abscess and subsequent development of Fournier’s gangrene. Clinical Medicine Insights: Case Reports, 9, 83–86. https://doi.org/10.4137/CCRep.S40420
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