Solitary Cardiac Metastasis from Esophageal Cancer.

2021 
A 72-year-old woman with past medical history of rectal cancer resection (adenocarcinoma, pT3N1aM0) presented with a 2-month history of dysphagia. Imaging studies found a thoracic esophageal cancer, for which subtotal esophagectomy with gastric conduit reconstruction via retrosternal route followed by chemoradiotherapy were performed (squamous cell carcinoma, pT4N1M0, RM1). Seven months after the esophagectomy, a contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) demonstrated a new asymptomatic mass inside the right atrium. A thrombus or a tumorous lesion was suspected. Positron emission tomography (PET)/CT showed abnormal uptake in the mass. After a thorough discussion by a multidisciplinary oncology group, we performed 1-week anticoagulant therapy first, resulting in mass enlargement. Then tumorectomy was carried out. The final pathological findings revealed that the mass was squamous cell carcinoma, yielding the diagnosis of cardiac metastasis from esophageal cancer. The patient's postoperative course was unremarkable. PET/CT may help to estimate malignancy and to omit invasive heart surgery.
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