Case Reports in Medicine (Jan 2014)

Metastasis to Sartorius Muscle from a Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer

  • Ioannis Katafigiotis,
  • Antonios Athanasiou,
  • Panagiotis K. Levis,
  • Evangelos Fragkiadis,
  • Stavros Sfoungaristos,
  • Achilles Ploumidis,
  • Adamantios Michalinos,
  • Christos Alamanis,
  • Evangelos Felekouras,
  • Constantinos A. Constantinides

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/524757
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2014

Abstract

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Bladder cancer constitutes the ninth most common cancer worldwide and approximately only 30% of cases are muscle invasive at initial diagnosis. Regional lymph nodes, bones, lung, and liver are the most common metastases from bladder cancer and generally from genitourinary malignancies. Muscles constitute a rare site of metastases from distant primary lesions even though they represent 50% of total body mass and receive a large blood flow. Skeletal muscles from urothelial carcinoma are very rare and up to date only few cases have been reported in the literature. We present a rare case of 51-year-old patient with metastases to sartorius muscle 8 months after the radical cystectomy performed for a muscle invasive bladder cancer.