AI Article Synopsis

  • A 66-year-old woman who had endometrial cancer found out her headaches got worse after 4 years since her surgery.
  • Doctors discovered she had a mass in her brain that was pressing on important areas, causing problems with her eyesight and walking.
  • Instead of doing surgery on the brain mass, they decided to treat it with special radiation because her cancer had spread to other parts of her body.

Article Abstract

A 66-year-old woman with a history of stage IA mixed endometrioid and serous endometrial cancer presented to our centre with 2 weeks of worsening headaches nearly 4 years after her initial surgery. At admission, she manifested bitemporal hemianopsia, difficulty walking and clinical and laboratory findings of panhypopituitarism, including diabetes insipidus. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain revealed a 2.7 cm sellar/suprasellar mass compressing the optic chiasm and infiltrating the pituitary stalk. Computerised tomography documented mediastinal, lung, adrenal and liver involvement, including a 2.5 cm palpable left supraclavicular node that on excisional biopsy demonstrated metastatic endometrial adenocarcinoma. Due to the advanced stage of her cancer as well as the presence of multiple metastases, including lung and hepatic metastases causing post-obstructive pneumonia and coagulopathy, the sellar/suprasellar mass was treated with fractionated radiosurgery rather than surgical excision.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7434505PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3332/ecancer.2020.1083DOI Listing

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