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Gynecologic Pathology
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Case 1 -
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Metastatic Colorectal Adenocarcinoma Involving the Endometrium

Michael Deavers
The University of Texas, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
Houston, TX
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Clinical History
The patient is a 64 year old woman who presented with vaginal bleeding. On abdominal/pelvic CT scan,
there was a large area of ill defined hypodensity centered over the endometrial cavity in the mid and
lower uterine body, suspicious for endometrial carcinoma. An endometrial biopsy was obtained.

 Case 1 - Slide 1
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Differential Diagnosis
- Endometrioid Endometrial Adenocarcinoma

- Endocervical Adenocarcinoma

- Serous Carcinoma

- Metastatic Adenocarcinoma

Discussion Points
- Not all adenocarcinomas identified in an EMB are from the
endometrium. Cervical primaries and metastases may also be encountered in these specimens.

- Most patients with metastases involving the uterus have a prior
history of cancer, but some metastases may mimic a primary gynecologic tumor. Approximately 1% of
patients referred to a gynecologic oncologist actually have gastrointestinal primaries, and in 20-30% of
those cases the metastasis is the initial presentation of their disease.

- While the ovary and the vagina are the most common sites of
metastasis to the gynecologic tract (80% of metastases involve at least one of those two sites), the
endometrium and cervix are involved in 8-9% of cases (intragenital and extragenital primaries).

- The ovary is the most common intragenital primary to involve the
uterus. The gastrointestinal tract (stomach, colon, pancreas) and breast are the most common
extragenital primaries.

- While it is important to consider the possibility of a metastasis in
women who have a history of colorectal cancer and subsequently are found to have an adenocarcinoma
involving the uterus, they are more likely to have a new endometrial primary (74%) than metastatic
colonic adenocarcinoma involving the endometrium.

- Histologic clues for metastatic colorectal carcinoma:
- Tumor distinctly separate from normal endometrium.

- Scattered focal cytologic atypia, inappropriate for the architectural grade.

- Dirty necrosis.

- Goblet cells.

- Fibrotic background.
Immunohistochemistry (CK7, CK20) can be useful.

Final Diagnosis
Metastatic Colorectal Adenocarcinoma involving the endometrium

Bibliography
- Abu-Rustum NR, Barakat RR, Curtin JP. Ovarian and uterine disease in women with colorectal cancer.
Obstet Gynecol 1997; 89:85-87.

- Benoit MF, Hannigan EV, Smith RP, Smith ER, Byers LJ. Primary gastrointestinal cancers presenting as
gynecologic malignancies. Gynecol Oncol 2004; 95:388-392.

- Kumar A, Schneider V. Metastases to the uterus from extrapelvic primary tumors. Int J Gynecol Pathol
1983; 2:134-140.

- Kumar NB, Hart WR. Metastases to the uterine corpus from extragenital cancers. A clinicopathologic
study of 63 cases. Cancer 1982; 50:2163-2169.

- Mazur MT, Hsueh S, Gersell DJ. Metastases to the female genital tract. Analysis of 325 cases.
Cancer 1984; 53:1978-1984.
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