The most common primary sites for bone metastases in men are lung, prostate, kidney, thyroid or bladder. Colorectal origin is rare. Few studies have described this type of metastases; the axial skeleton or the pelvis are the most common metastasis locations. Craniofacial location is exceptional. We here report the case of a 38 years old man treated for metastatic rectal cancer metastasized to temporal bone. He initially had undergone surgical procedure for low anterior resection, tumor was classified as pT3N0M0; 24 months after the patient had left exophthalmos revealing a temporal tumoral process. Evolution and context favoured metastasis. In conclusion, this study reporting an exceptional case of craniofacial bone metastasis from multi-metastatic colorectal cancer will enrich the scarce data reported in the literature related to bone metastases from primary colorectal cancer.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5398856PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2017.26.58.9826DOI Listing

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