Metastatic colon adenocarcinoma involving the extraocular muscles is extremely rare. It usually develops following the diagnosis of the systemic disease and therefore, management and treatment require a multispecialty approach. Within this manuscript, we provide a summary of cases of orbital metastasis secondary to colon cancer. We further discuss a detailed case of a 42-year-old male patient who developed recent-onset diplopia in the left gaze. Orbital CT imaging showed a localized, well-circumscribed enlargement of the right medial rectus muscle. The biopsy of the right medial rectus showed adenocarcinoma originating from the gastrointestinal system. Further workup revealed colon adenocarcinoma with multiple metastatic sites. The patient started systemic chemotherapy. After 2 months of chemotherapy (5-fluouracil, oxaliplatin, irinotecan, and leucovorin), all systemic metastatic sites regressed; however, his medial rectus muscle continued to grow, causing compressive optic neuropathy. The patient underwent excisional biopsy of the right medial rectus muscle with simultaneous repair of the strabismus with transposition of superior and inferior recti muscles. He continued with systemic chemotherapy. Follow up in 1 year revealed no local orbital tumor recurrence with excellent visual acuity and no diplopia in primary gaze.

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