Spinal metastasis from lung cancer fifteen years after surgery presenting a pseudohemangioma appearance of the vertebra: a case report.
2010
STUDY DESIGN: Case report. OBJECTIVE: To describe a case of solitary metastasis of the seventh thoracic vertebra (T7) from lung cancer 15 years after surgery. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Late recurrence of the bone over 5 years after curative surgery for lung cancer is highly exceptional. In addition, bone metastasis from lung cancer showing a coarse trabecular pattern of the vertebra on computed tomography (CT) is quite unusual. METHODS: A case of solitary metastasis of T7 from lung cancer 15 years after surgery showing a pseudohemangioma appearance of the vertebra on CT is presented. RESULTS: A 66-year-old man presented with a 2-month history of gradually progressed numbness and muscle weakness of the bilateral leg, with a more recently developed spastic gate. He had undergone a left lower lobectomy for lung cancer 15 years previously. Magnetic resonance imaging showed an ill-defined mass lesion involving the entire vertebral body of T7 with extension into the posterior element and surrounding soft tissue, which resulted in moderate spinal canal stenosis. CT showed a coarse trabecular pattern at T7 with a mild compression fracture. No other lesion was detected by whole-body CT and bone scintigraphy. Tumor resection and T5-T9 posterior spinal fusion had been performed, and a pathologic diagnosis of metastatic pulmonary adenocarcinoma of the bone was established. Additional radiation therapy (40 Gy) was added, and the patient recovered and continued to survive uneventfully at the 3-month follow-up. CONCLUSION: We have reported a rare case of solitary metastasis to T7 appearing 15 years after surgery for lung cancer. The incidence of lung cancer recurrence more than 5 years after surgery is exceedingly low; however, even in patients with lung cancer, late occurrence of bone metastasis should be considered and included in the differential diagnosis of a pseudohemangioma appearance of the vertebra.
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