Case Reports in Oncology (Oct 2015)

Five Simultaneous Primary Tumors in a Single Patient: A Case Report and Review of the Literature

  • Casey W. Williamson,
  • Anthony Paravati,
  • Majid Ghassemi,
  • Kristine Lethert,
  • Patricia Hua,
  • Patricia Hartman,
  • Parag Sanghvi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000440799
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
pp. 432 – 438

Abstract

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Multiple primary malignancies (MPMs) are present when a patient is diagnosed with more than one primary malignancy and when each tumor is histologically unrelated to the others. MPMs are considered synchronous when they present within 6 months of one another. Here, we report the case of a 57-year-old woman with a past medical history significant for melanoma in 1988, who presented in 2014 with 5 distinct tumors within 4 months: malignant melanoma of the right popliteal fossa, invasive lobular breast carcinoma, diffuse large B cell lymphoma, nodular lymphocyte predominant Hodgkin lymphoma, and a giant cell tumor of tendon sheath/pigmented villonodular synovitis. We discuss her treatment and also present a brief review of the literature. The incidence of MPMs appears to be on the rise, which demands an interdisciplinary, multimodal, and personalized approach to care.

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