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A case of colon cancer implanted on endoscopic resection ulcer certified by cancer genomic testing. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A 90-year-old man had advanced colon cancer treated through various endoscopic procedures and laparoscopic surgery, but a year later, a surveillance colonoscopy revealed new cancer at the site of a previous endoscopic lesion.
  • The new cancer was likely caused by cancer cells from the original tumor being implanted in the ulcer created during the endoscopic procedure.
  • Cancer genomic testing showed that most genetic mutations found in the new cancer matched those from the original descending colon cancer, reinforcing the idea that cells can be transferred and lead to new tumors after endoscopic interventions.

Article Abstract

A 90 year-old man underwent endoscopic mucosal resection for lesions in the descending and sigmoid colons as well as endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) for a lesion in the rectal peritoneal reflection (Ra) 1 month before undergoing laparoscopic resection and D3 dissection for advanced cancer in the descending colon. One year later, he underwent a surveillance colonoscopy, and advanced colorectal cancer was detected on the ESD scar. The history suggested that this newly detected recurrent colorectal neoplasm on the ESD scar may have originated from cancer cells derived from the descending colon cancer that were implanted in the ESD ulcer, thereby initiating a new colorectal neoplasm. Cancer genomic testing further indicated that three of the four pathogenic variants detected in the recurrent colorectal neoplasm were consistent with pathogenic variants of descending colon cancer. This finding strongly supports our contention that cancer cells derived from the descending colon cancer were implanted in the post-ESD ulcer of the rectal Ra and proliferated, forming the recurrent colorectal neoplasm. This case report highlights the potential for tumor cell implantation on endoscopic resection ulcers and the utility of cancer genomic testing in validating this phenomenon.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11549191PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12328-024-02037-3DOI Listing

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