A Case with Solitary Brain Metastatic Tumor from Colon Cancer

2017 
: We report a rare long-surviving case of solitary brain metastasis from colon cancer. The patient was a 64-year-old female. She had undergone laparoscopic right hemicolectomy for ascending colon cancer in October 2012(pStage III b). She was discharged from the hospitalin a satisfactory state, but 26 days after the operation, she was transported to the emergency department for systemic tonic-clonic convulsions. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed solitary metastatic tumor in the brain, but there were no metastatic lesions in other organs. Metastatic lesion was small and complete removal was considered to be difficult. Thus, we planned stereotactic radiosurgery for the metastases, and then regimen of mFOLFOX6 plus Bmab, tegafur-uracil plus Leucovorin were administered. As a means of evaluating recurrence of brain metastasis, methionine positron emission tomography(methionine PET)was also performed, and the patient has survived for 54 months since the surgery, to date, without recurrence. Cases with brain metastasis of colorectal cancer often have metastases involving other organs and are considered to have a poor prognosis. For solitary brain metastasis, long-term survival can be obtained with multidisciplinary treatments, and methionine PET is considered to be usefulfor recurrence evaluation after radiation treatment.
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