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Widespread metastatic breast cancer to the bowel: an unexpected finding during colonoscopy
Author(s) -
Ruben BlachmanBraun,
Isaac Felemovicius,
Kyle Barker,
Eric Kehrberg,
Faizan Haider Khan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
oxford medical case reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.169
H-Index - 9
ISSN - 2053-8855
DOI - 10.1093/omcr/omy133
Subject(s) - medicine , submucosa , colonoscopy , metastatic breast cancer , laparotomy , gastrointestinal tract , colorectal cancer , breast cancer , metastatic carcinoma , metastasis , lobular carcinoma , pathology , breast carcinoma , cancer , carcinoma , oncology , radiology , gastroenterology , ductal carcinoma
Metastatic neoplasms to the gastrointestinal (GI) tract are an uncommon entity and in extremely rare cases originate from the breast. The clinical manifestations of metastatic breast cancer into the GI tract are frequently non-specific, and the interval between the diagnosis of lobular carcinoma and GI metastasis can often delay up to 30 years. Here, we present a 73-year-old female with an unusual colonoscopy that revealed a submucosa nodular infiltrate throughout all the colon with a cobblestone-like appearance, which was later confirmed to be metastatic lobular carcinoma of the breast that was surgically removed 15 years early. A couple of months later, she developed malignant small bowel obstruction and laparotomy revealed extended small bowel and colonic metastatic involvement.

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