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An official publication of the Middle-Eastern Association for Cancer Research
Clinical Cancer Investigation Journal
ISSN Print: 2278-1668, Online: 2278-0513
ARTICLE
Year: 2016   |   Volume: 5   |   Issue: 1   |   Page: 69-72     View issue

Omentum: An unusual site for distant metastasis for post-surgery radiotherapy treated squamous cell carcinoma larynx


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Abstract

Squamous cell carcinoma of the larynx is the most common histologic type, accounting for up to 90% of cancers with more predilections to spread locoregionally to the cervical lymph nodes. Distant metastasis, usually to lungs, bone, and liver is seen much less frequently, with an overall incidence of 6.5–7.3%. A case of 55-year-old male with the previous history of surgery and radiotherapy treated squamous cell carcinoma of the larynx, presenting with a chief complaint of pain abdomen is hereby reported for its unusual diagnosis of metastatic deposits of squamous cell carcinoma in the omentum. Though there are reference available for peritoneum as the distant metastatic site for hypopharyngeal carcinoma, reference for laryngeal carcinoma metastasizing to omentum were not found even with an extensive search of literature. Awareness of unusual sites of distant metastasis such as omentum must be kept in mind for treated laryngeal carcinoma patients presenting with non-specific symptoms like pain abdomen. And also, chances of involvement of unusual site of the distant metastasis increases with advanced tumor-node-metastasis stage and nodal status.

Cite this article
Vancouver
Kundu T, Gon S, Mallick D, Ghosh G. Omentum: An unusual site for distant metastasis for post-surgery radiotherapy treated squamous cell carcinoma larynx. Clin Cancer Investig J. 2016;5(1):69-72. https://doi.org/10.4103/2278-0513.172061
APA
Kundu, T., Gon, S., Mallick, D., & Ghosh, G. (2016). Omentum: An unusual site for distant metastasis for post-surgery radiotherapy treated squamous cell carcinoma larynx. Clinical Cancer Investigation Journal, 5(1), 69-72. https://doi.org/10.4103/2278-0513.172061

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ISSN Print: 2278-1668, Online: 2278-0513