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Original Research

Open Access

Metastatic cervical adenocarcinoma mimicking retroperitoneal sarcoma of the psoas muscle on imaging

  • J.H. Hong1
  • S.H. Song2,*,
  • J.K. Lee2
  • N.W. Lee2
  • K.W. Lee2

1Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Kangbuk Samsung Hospital, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea

2Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, College of Medicine, Korea University, Seoul, Korea

DOI: 10.12892/ejgo201102221 Vol.32,Issue 2,March 2011 pp.221-223

Published: 10 March 2011

*Corresponding Author(s): S.H. Song E-mail: cooljog@dreamwiz.com

Abstract

Background: The incidence of bone metastasis is low in metastatic cervical cancer, especially in the case of adenocarcinoma. Incidental finding of a mass located in an unusual metastatic site in the absence of identifiable primary tumor often results in a difficult diagnostic problem. Case report: We report the case of a 59-year-old woman presenting left-sided foot drop as her initial symptom. At first, after performing lumbar spine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a huge paravertebral mass with ipsilateral psoas muscle involvement suggesting retroperitoneal sarcoma was identified. However, cervical punch biopsy and sono-guided paravertebral mass biopsy revealed cervical adenocarcinoma with lumbar spinal metastasis. Conclusion: Although rare, a neurological symptom such as foot drop, not vaginal symptoms, in a woman may be a first manifestation of metastatic cervical cancer, especially in spinal metastasis. Furthermore, any abnormal lesion should not be ignored because of the possibility of metastasis from the primary malignancy, especially in the current case of cervical adenocarcinoma, so a complete evaluation is always mandatory.

Keywords

Cervical cancer; Adenocarcinoma; Retroperitoneal sarcoma; Spinal metastasis

Cite and Share

J.H. Hong,S.H. Song,J.K. Lee,N.W. Lee,K.W. Lee. Metastatic cervical adenocarcinoma mimicking retroperitoneal sarcoma of the psoas muscle on imaging. European Journal of Gynaecological Oncology. 2011. 32(2);221-223.

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