Bar-Gil Shitrit Ariella, Shitrit David, Bakal Ilana, Braverman Dan, Kramer Mordechai R
Gastroenterology Institute, Shaare - Zedek Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel.
Dis Colon Rectum. 2007 Jul;50(7):1087-9. doi: 10.1007/s10350-006-0880-z.
The liver is the most common site of hematogenous spread from colon tumors. Pulmonary metastases from colon cancer result, in most of the cases, from hepatic metastases.
We describe eight cases of colorectal cancers in which endobronchial metastases have been developed without any evidence of liver involvement.
Median age was 62 years old. In most of the patients, the primary cancer developed in the left side. The median time from colorectal presentation to pulmonary onset was four years. Dyspnea was the major symptom in all cases. Pulmonary involvement included endobronchial metastasis in all cases. CT scan of the chest showed bilateral, diffuse, large, nodular infiltrates without lymph nodes enlargement and without pleural effusion. Endobronchial therapy brought symptomatic relief in all cases; however, two-year follow-up showed only 50 percent survival rate.
Endobronchial metastasis should be suspected in patients with colon cancer with respiratory symptoms, even without known liver metastasis. To the best of our knowledge, such a case series has not been published yet.