Primary malignant melanoma of the ascending colon.
Spyridon MiliarasIoannis A ZiogasKonstantinos S MylonasVasileios N PapadopoulosPublished in: BMJ case reports (2018)
Malignant gastrointestinal melanoma is usually a metastatic lesion. We report the case of a 67-year-old female patient who presented with intermittent abdominal pain, fever, rigor and diarrhoea. CT scan of the abdomen revealed a large mass at the right iliac fossa with features concerning for intra-abdominal abscess. Exploratory laparotomy confirmed the preoperative diagnosis of abscess, and a right hemicolectomy was performed. Histopathological examination of the surgical specimen was indicative of malignant melanoma, and immunohistochemical examination showed positivity to S100 protein, Melan-A, HMB-45 and vimentin. A series of postoperative clinical, laboratory and imaging examinations revealed no suspicious lesions in the skin, eye, leptomeninges or other sites. Therefore, the diagnosis of primary colonic melanoma was confirmed. Only 36 additional cases of primary colonic melanoma have been reported to date. These rare neoplasms are challenging to diagnose and usually require a multidisciplinary treatment approach, including surgery, chemotherapy and possibly immunotherapy or radiotherapy.
Keyphrases
- abdominal pain
- patients undergoing
- computed tomography
- squamous cell carcinoma
- minimally invasive
- single cell
- small cell lung cancer
- locally advanced
- early stage
- skin cancer
- high resolution
- ulcerative colitis
- magnetic resonance imaging
- basal cell carcinoma
- high intensity
- radiation induced
- acute coronary syndrome
- image quality
- magnetic resonance
- rare case
- pulmonary artery
- small molecule
- protein protein
- pulmonary hypertension
- replacement therapy
- endovascular treatment