Cases reported "Neoplasm Seeding"

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1/178. Unexpected gallbladder cancer after laparoscopic cholecystectomy: an emerging problem? Reflections on four cases.

    gallbladder cancer (GC) has been reported in 0.3-1.5% of cholecystectomies. Since the introduction of laparoscopic surgery, cholecystectomies have increased and occult GC may therefore be more frequent. Herein we analyze our own experience to determine whether there was an increase in GC. We also evaluate the risk factors for this outcome. Four patients with GC undiagnosed before surgery (four of 602 cases, or 0.66%) were submitted to laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The percentage in patients who underwent open surgery was 0.28% (two of 714 cases). Without reoperation, three patients died in the laparoscopic group and one is alive at 12 months. Trocar site metastasis was not observed. Although the percentage of GC (0.28% versus 0.66%) increased, the percentage is still in the referred average. Undiagnosed GC is on the increase. Examination of the gallbladder and a frozen section, if necessary, are recommended. Calcified gallbladders, age >70 years, a long history of stones, and a thickened gallbladder all represent significant risk factors.
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ranking = 1
keywords = gallbladder cancer, gallbladder, cancer
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2/178. Peritoneal mucinous carcinomatosis after laparoscopic-assisted anterior resection for early rectal cancer: report of a case.

    Minimally invasive colon surgery has been shown to be both technically feasible and a safe alternative to laparotomy. Its efficacy for the curative resection of colorectal cancer, however, remains controversial. Of major concern are the increasing reports of port-site recurrence after use of laparoscopic techniques in malignant disease. In this article a heretofore unreported complication of peritoneal mucinous carcinomatosis after laparoscopic-assisted anterior resection for early stage rectal cancer is presented. Isolated peritoneal recurrence is rare after curative resection of Stage I rectal cancer. The effect of pneumoperitoneum on tumor dissemination is discussed.
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ranking = 0.0067371090109947
keywords = cancer
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3/178. Extraosseous metastases of hepatocellular carcinoma detection and therapeutic assessment with Tc-99m PMT SPECT.

    Owing to recent advances in imaging technology and radiologic intervention, survival rates in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma have improved markedly. However, such prolonged survival has resulted in an increase in extrahepatic metastases. Tc-99m (Sn)-N-pyridoxyl-5-methyltryptophan (Tc-99m PMT), developed for hepatobiliary scintigraphy, has been used to visualize extrahepatic metastases, with most related reports limited to osseous metastases. The authors report two cases of hepatocellular cancer presenting as a hypopharyngeal metastasis and intraperitoneal dissemination along the tract of a fine-needle biopsy. Lesions undetectable on planar imaging could be visualized by Tc-99m PMT SPECT.
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ranking = 0.00096244414442782
keywords = cancer
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4/178. Port-site metastasis following laparoscopic lymphadenectomy for adenosquamous carcinoma of the cervix.

    Although incisional metastases following surgery for cervical cancer are extremely rare, port-site disease following minimal-access surgery is becoming increasingly reported. We report a case of a metastasis which occurred at a port site following laparoscopic removal of lymph nodes affected by cervical adenosquamous carcinoma. This report adds to the literature suggesting that cutaneous tumor deposition may be enhanced by this method of surgery.
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ranking = 0.00096244414442782
keywords = cancer
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5/178. Port site metastases after laparoscopic cholecystectomy for an unexpected gallbladder carcinoma.

    Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is a proven, well-accepted surgical technique for removing the diseased gallbladder and has rapidly become the surgical procedure of choice over conventional open cholecystectomy. Radiologists must be aware of the possibility of inadvertent dissemination of incidental gallbladder cancer during laparoscopic cholecystectomy. We report a case of this unusual complication: a patient with port site metastases after laparoscopic cholecystectomy for an unexpected gallbladder carcinoma at an early stage.
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ranking = 0.37976360880472
keywords = gallbladder cancer, gallbladder, cancer
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6/178. Port-site metastasis after laparoscopic cholecystectomy for benign disease.

    We describe the case history of a patient presenting with a port-site metastasis from an occult pancreatic malignancy after laparoscopy for benign gallbladder disease. While port-site recurrence is well recognized after laparoscopy for malignant disease, its presentation after laparoscopy for benign disease is rare, this being only the third such case to be reported in the literature. It emphasizes that all pathology localizing to port sites after surgery should be investigated, as it may represent the earliest sign of a hitherto occult intra-abdominal malignancy.
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ranking = 0.024762708541111
keywords = gallbladder
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7/178. Subcutaneous seeding after ultrasound-guided placement of intrapleural catheter. An unusual complication of the intracavitary palliative treatment of pleural mesothelioma.

    Intrapleural catheters are useful in the palliative treatment of malignant effusions. Complications are infrequent and of little importance. We report a case of subcutaneous implantation metastasis along the course of intrapleural catheter, which had been placed under sonographic guidance in a patient with pleural mesothelioma. After drainage of the effusion, cisplatin plus cytarabine was administered via the chest tube, achieving complete remission of the pleural effusion. Subcutaneous metastasis became evident 3 months later and was the only sign of disease progression for 2 months. The seeding of cancer cells was probably caused by a small leakage of fluid around the chest tube that occurred during the placement procedure as a result of the increased intrapleural pressure caused by the large quantity of fluid that had accumulated in the pleural space.
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ranking = 0.00096244414442782
keywords = cancer
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8/178. Metastatic esophageal cancer leading to gastric perforation after repeat PEG placement.

    Various complications from percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy have been reported. We describe a case of pneumoperitoneum after percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy placement because of gastric wall weakening from malignant stomal seeding and, possibly, from chemoradiation.
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ranking = 0.0038497765777113
keywords = cancer
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9/178. Cytogenetic monoclonality in multifocal uroepithelial carcinomas: evidence of intraluminal tumour seeding.

    Twenty-one multifocal urinary tract transitional cell carcinomas, mostly bladder tumours, from a total of six patients were processed for cytogenetic analysis after short-term culturing of the tumour cells. Karyotypically related, often identical, cytogenetically complex clones were found in all informative tumours from each case, including the recurrent tumours. Rearrangement of chromosome 9, leading to loss of material from the short and/or the long arm, was seen in all cases, indicating that this is an early, pathogenetically important event in transitional cell carcinogenesis. The presence of related clones with great karyotypic similarity in anatomically distinct tumours from the same bladder indicates that multifocal uroepithelial tumours have a monoclonal origin and arise via intraluminal seeding of viable cancer cells shed from the original tumour. Later lesions may develop also from cells shed from the so called second primary tumours. The relatively complex karyotypes seen in all lesions from most cases argue that the seeding of tumour cells is a late event that succeeds the acquisition by them of multiple secondary genetic abnormalities.
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ranking = 0.00096244414442782
keywords = cancer
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10/178. Laparoscopic port-site metastasis of an early stage adenocarcinoma of the cervix with negative lymph nodes.

    BACKGROUND: Port-site metastasis (PSM) following laparoscopic surgery for cancer is being increasingly recognized as a potential problem; the majority of cases appear following laparoscopy for a pelvic mass that subsequently proved to be malignant or in the case of a disseminated intraperitoneal disease. The rare cases of PSM following laparoscopy for endometrial and cervical cancer have all been associated with the presence of regional lymph node metastasis or disseminated disease in the peritoneal cavity. We present here a case report of PSM in the absence of spread beyond the primary tumor. CASE: A 48-year-old woman with stage IA1 adenocarcinoma of the cervix was treated with laparoscopically assisted vaginal hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, and bilateral pelvic node dissection. The pathologic study revealed an endocervical adenocarcinoma confined to the cervix with negative lymph nodes. Nine months postoperatively, a cutaneous metastasis at the port-site was diagnosed. This was treated with wide local excision of the recurrence and the port-site track. Explorative laparotomy and para-aortic node sampling showed no evidence of recurrence elsewhere. CONCLUSION: This case emphasizes the risk for PSM in laparoscopic surgery performed for early stage disease.
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ranking = 0.0019248882888556
keywords = cancer
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