Unusual Presentation of Recurrent Early Stage Endometrial Carcinoma 28 Years after Primary Surgery

  • Franchello A
  • Fronda G
  • Deiro G
  • et al.
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Abstract

Endometrial carcinoma is the most common neoplasia of female genital tract. The prognosis of early stage disease (FIGO I and FIGO II) is excellent: recurrence after surgery is less than 15%, most of which are reported within 3 years after primary treatment. Herein we report a case of late rectal recurrence from FIGO Ib endometrial adenocarcinoma. Patient had also familiar and personal history of colonic adenocarcinoma and previous findings of microsatellite instability (MSI); molecular analysis evidenced heterozygotic somatic mutation in MLH1 gene. Twenty-eight years after hysterectomy and bilateral salpingoovariectomy, a rectal wall mass was detected during routine colonoscopy. Patients underwent CT scan, pelvic MRI, and rectal EUS with FNA: histopathological and immunohistochemical analysis revealed differentiated carcinoma cells of endometrial origin. No neoadjuvant treatment was planned and low rectal anterior resection with protective colostomy was performed; histology confirmed rectal lesion as metastasis from endometrial carcinoma. Recurrence of early stage endometrial carcinoma after a long period from primary surgery is possible. It is important to keep in mind this possibility in order to set a correct diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm, including preoperative immunohistochemical staining, and to plan a prolonged follow-up program.

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APA

Franchello, A., Fronda, G., Deiro, G., Fiore, A., Cassine, D., Molinaro, L., … Silvestri, S. (2015). Unusual Presentation of Recurrent Early Stage Endometrial Carcinoma 28 Years after Primary Surgery. Case Reports in Surgery, 2015, 1–4. https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/256838

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