Iris metastasis of gastric adenocarcinoma

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Abstract

Background: Iris metastasis in patients with gastric cancer is extremely rare. Herein, it is aimed to report on a patient with gastric adenocarcinoma and iris metastasis. Case presentation: A 65-year-old patient with the history of gastric cancer was admitted for eye pain and eye redness on his left eye. There was ciliary injection, severe +4 cells with hypopyon in the anterior chamber and a solitary, friable, yellow-white, fleshy-creamy vascularized 2 mm × 4 mm mass on the upper nasal part of the iris within the left eye. The presented patient's mass lesion in the iris fulfilled the criteria of the metastatic iris lesion's appearance. The ocular metastasis occurred during chemotherapy. Conclusions: Iris metastasis can masquerade as iridocyclitis with pseudohypopyon or glaucoma. In patients with a history of gastric cancer that present with an iris mass, uveitis, and high intraocular pressure, ocular metastasis of gastric cancer should be a consideration.

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Celebi, R. C., Kilavuzoglu, A. E., Emrah Altiparmak, U., Banu Cosar, C., & Ozkiris, A. (2016). Iris metastasis of gastric adenocarcinoma. World Journal of Surgical Oncology, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12957-016-0840-6

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