Surgical Case Reports (Jun 2023)

Testicular metastasis 9 years after resection of primary descending colon cancer with simultaneous pulmonary metastasis: a case report

  • Daishi Yoshimura,
  • Yuki Sekido,
  • Hidekazu Takahashi,
  • Tsuyoshi Hata,
  • Atsushi Hamabe,
  • Takayuki Ogino,
  • Norikatsu Miyoshi,
  • Mamoru Uemura,
  • Hirofumi Yamamoto,
  • Yuichiro Doki,
  • Hidetoshi Eguchi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40792-023-01684-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Background Metastatic testicular cancer is rare. In particular, primary colorectal cancer rarely metastasizes to the testes. This study reports a case of testicular metastasis recurrence 9 years after the resection of a primary colorectal cancer and a simultaneous metastatic lung tumour. Case presentation A 69-year-old man underwent a laparoscopic left hemicolectomy for descending colon cancer. Preoperative computed tomography revealed a solitary left lung mass. Postoperative chemotherapy reduced the size of the lung mass, and 6 months after the primary resection, the patient underwent a left upper segmentectomy. Based on the pathological examination, he was diagnosed with pulmonary metastasis from colorectal cancer. After four courses of adjuvant chemotherapy, the patient was recurrence-free. However, 9 years and 6 months after the primary resection, he complained of discomfort in his left testicle. Physical examination revealed a left testicular mass. Since a malignancy was not excluded via imaging, left testicular resection was performed to confirm the diagnosis. The pathological diagnosis was testicular metastasis from colorectal cancer. The patient was followed up without medication, and remained healthy, without recurrence, 11 months postoperatively. Conclusions It is important to follow up with testicular metastasis in mind, although it is rare.

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