A Case of Resected Pancreatic Metastasis of Rectal Cancer after Multiple Resections of Metastatic Lesions

2019 
: A 71-year-old man underwent low anterior resection for rectal cancer 10 years prior. He underwent resection of liver metastasis once and that of lung metastases multiple times after the primary surgery. Computed tomography revealed a mass measuring 22mm in size in the pancreatic body 10 years after the rectal resection. We inspected it before surgery by performing EUS-FNA. On suspicion of metastasis of rectal cancer or primary pancreatic cancer, we performed distal pancreatectomy. The pancreatic tumor was diagnosed as metastasis of the rectal cancer. There were multiple metastases in the resected specimen that we were unable to indicate at the preoperative inspection. Resectable pancreatic metastasis from colorectal cancer is rare, but some patients with long-term survival have been reported. If a patient is tolerant to pancreatectomy and has no metastasis in other organs, the patient should be considered as a good candidate for pancreatectomy.
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