Diagnosis of disseminated bone marrow carcinomatosis from gastric carcinoma initially presenting as asymptomatic anemia

2015 
Abstract A 75-year-old man who had undergone subtotal gastrectomy for advanced gastric cancer 18 years previously with no signs of recurrence visited our hospital because of anemia detected by medical examination. Although no clinical abnormalities were evident, treatment with iron and vitamin B12 was started. However, because serum ALP was elevated, metastatic bone cancer was suspected. Subsequently, upper gastrointestinal endoscopy revealed findings suggestive of residual gastric cancer, and examination of a biopsy specimen demonstrated signet ring cell carcinoma. Furthermore, cells in a bone marrow biopsy sample showed morphology similar to that of cells obtained by stomach biopsy. FDG-PET demonstrated FDG accumulation only in the bone and residual stomach. The final diagnosis was bone metastasis from residual gastric cancer, and disseminated carcinomatosis of the bone marrow. Thereafter, pancytopenia progressed rapidly, and the patient died due to disseminated intravascular coagulation. When serum ALP is elevated in patients with a history of gastric cancer, bone marrow carcinomatosis should be suspected irrespective of symptoms, and imaging studies and bone marrow examination should be performed.
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