Metastatic Melanoma of the Gallbladder in an Asymptomatic Patient.
Asad KhanSejal PatelDaniel J ZaccariniMary McGrathPublished in: Case reports in gastrointestinal medicine (2017)
Malignant Melanoma (MM) is among the most dangerous malignancies with some of the least known survival rates. Melanoma most commonly metastasizes to regional lymph nodes, the lungs, and brain. Metastatic disease of the gallbladder (GB) is exceptionally rare making it difficult to diagnose. The fact that typically patients do not present until they are symptomatic-only after widespread metastatic disease has already occurred-is further complicating the diagnosis of MM of the GB. For this reason, MM of the GB is rarely discovered in living patients. In fact, review of the literature showed only 40 instances in which metastatic disease of the GB was reported in living patients. We describe the presentation and management of a patient who had metastatic disease of the GB. However, our case is unique because his malignancy was discovered incidentally while he was asymptomatic. He was successfully treated with an open cholecystectomy. We have presented this case in order to make the necessity of meticulous investigation of potential metastasis in patients with a known history of cutaneous melanoma clear.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- squamous cell carcinoma
- small cell lung cancer
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- lymph node
- prognostic factors
- risk assessment
- case report
- early stage
- climate change
- multiple sclerosis
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- blood brain barrier
- resting state
- skin cancer
- sentinel lymph node