A Case of Pancreatic Cancer with Concomitant Pancreatic Metastasis of Renal Cell Carcinoma

Journal: Gan To Kagaku Ryoho. Cancer & Chemotherapy
Published:
Abstract

A 52-year-old man presented with a postoperative abdominal ultrasound of left renal cell carcinoma, which revealed a dilated main pancreatic duct in the pancreatic body tail. A 15 mm tumor was noted in the pancreatic head-neck region on CT, and was diagnosed as invasive pancreatic cancer on EUS-FNA. The tumor was diagnosed as resectable pancreatic head-body cancer, and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, a subtotal stomach-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy was performed. Postoperative histopathology showed well-differentiated adenocarcinoma, TS1(9 mm), T1bN0M0, Stage Ⅰ, preoperative chemotherapy efficacy was Grade 2, and R0 resection was obtained. At the same time, a 4 mm-sized nodule was found in the center of the pancreatic head, far from the primary pancreatic cancer, and was diagnosed as renal cell carcinoma intrapancreatic metastasis. He received 4 courses of S-1 therapy as postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer, and is alive 23 months postoperatively without recurrence. The coexistence of primary pancreatic cancer and pancreatic metastasis of renal cell carcinoma is extremely rare, and we report this case with a review of the literature.