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Rare metastatic sites of renal cell carcinoma: a case series

Anurag Singla, Umesh Sharma, Arun Makkar, Pirzada Faisal Masood, Hemant Goel, Rajeev Sood, Arvind Ahuja, Ravi Kant Singh

2022Pan African Medical Journal25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Renal Cell Carcinoma (RCC) is a lethal cancer with a propensity for wide metastasis. The patterns of metastases are not clearly defined, and patients can present with metastasis to unusual sites at the time of diagnosis of the primary tumor or years after radical nephrectomy. Individual diagnostic and surgical approaches are needed to achieve complete resection with disease-free margins, even in the presence of unusual metastatic sites, multifocality, or history of previous metastasectomy. This provides palliation for symptoms and an opportunity for meaningful disease-free and overall survival. Here we present five cases of RCC with metastasis to unusual sites (scalp, jaw, forearm, parotid, breast, and skeletal muscle). Patients were treated with cytoreductive nephrectomy and/or metastasectomy wherever feasible and/or targeted therapy. In conclusion, a high index of suspicion and accurate diagnosis is important as metastasis to unusual sites presents with atypical manifestations and may masquerade as local pathology, misleading the clinician and directly affecting prognosis and survival.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMetastasectomyNephrectomyMetastasisRenal cell carcinomaDiseaseMetastatic breast cancerSurgeryCancerRadiologyOncologyPathologyInternal medicineKidneyBreast cancerCancer Diagnosis and TreatmentRenal cell carcinoma treatmentMedical Imaging and Pathology Studies