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Endometrioid endometrial cancer "recurring" as high-grade serous adenocarcinoma in the inguinal lymph nodes in a patient with germline MLH1 mutated Lynch syndrome: consequence or coincidence?


ABSTRACT:

Background

Inguinal metastasis of endometrial cancer (EC) is rare. The aims of the study were to identify whether the inguinal metastatic tumor was originated from EC and to present the management of the disease.

Methods

The clinical data of a case of endometrioid EC "recurring" as serous adenocarcinoma in the inguinal lymph nodes were collected and analyzed. Paired samples of primary and metastatic tumors were used for exome sequencing to determine whether the tumors are same origination and to identify potential gene mutations associated with the relapse.

Results

The patient presented with right inguinal lymphadenopathy and histopathology revealed metastatic serous adenocarcinoma. A germline MLH1 mutation was identified. A combination of bioinformatical methods and cancer-related gene exome sequencing assay identified that only 17 (0.1%) somatic gene mutations were shared by the primary EC and the metastatic inguinal tumor, suggesting that the metastasis did not originate from the primary EC. Postoperative radiation therapy followed by a combination of chemotherapy were performed. Thirty-four months after that, the patient was doing well without any evidence of recurrence.

Conclusions

This is the first case of metastatic inguinal serous adenocarcinoma in a woman with Lynch syndrome shortly after surgical treatment of stage I endometrioid EC.

SUBMITTER: Jiang W 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6528268 | biostudies-literature | 2019

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Endometrioid endometrial cancer "recurring" as high-grade serous adenocarcinoma in the inguinal lymph nodes in a patient with germline MLH1 mutated Lynch syndrome: consequence or coincidence?

Jiang Wei W   Gao Tong T   Tao Xiang X   Zhu Menghan M   Yao Liangqing L   Feng Weiwei W  

Hereditary cancer in clinical practice 20190521


<h4>Background</h4>Inguinal metastasis of endometrial cancer (EC) is rare. The aims of the study were to identify whether the inguinal metastatic tumor was originated from EC and to present the management of the disease.<h4>Methods</h4>The clinical data of a case of endometrioid EC "recurring" as serous adenocarcinoma in the inguinal lymph nodes were collected and analyzed. Paired samples of primary and metastatic tumors were used for exome sequencing to determine whether the tumors are same ori  ...[more]

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