Case Report
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World J Gastroenterol. Oct 14, 2012; 18(38): 5476-5478
Published online Oct 14, 2012. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v18.i38.5476
Metachronous penile metastasis from rectal cancer after total pelvic exenteration
Yuta Kimura, Dai Shida, Keiichi Nasu, Hiroki Matsunaga, Masahiro Warabi, Satoru Inoue
Yuta Kimura, Dai Shida, Keiichi Nasu, Hiroki Matsunaga, Satoru Inoue, Department of Surgery, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh Hospital, 4-23-15 Koto-bashi, Sumida-ku, Tokyo 1308575, Japan
Masahiro Warabi, Department of Pathology, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh Hospital, 4-23-15 Koto-bashi, Sumida-ku, Tokyo 1308575, Japan
Author contributions: Kimura Y, Nasu K, Matsunaga H, Warabi M, and Inoue S collected the data, performed the treatment and wrote the paper; Shida D was responsible for writing the paper and its supervision.
Correspondence to: Dai Shida, MD, PhD, Department of Surgery, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh Hospital, 4-23-15 Koto-bashi, Sumida-ku, Tokyo 1308575, Japan. dshida-tky@umin.ac.jp
Telephone: +81-3-36336151 Fax: +81-3-36336173
Received: March 18, 2012
Revised: June 20, 2012
Accepted: August 14, 2012
Published online: October 14, 2012
Abstract

Despite its abundant vascularization and extensive circulatory communication with neighboring organs, metastases to the penis are a rare event. A 57-year-old male, who had undergone total pelvic exenteration for rectal cancer sixteen months earlier, demonstrated an abnormal uptake within his penis by positron emission tomography/computed tomography. A single elastic nodule of the middle penis shaft was noted deep within Bucks fascia. No other obvious recurrent site was noted except the penile lesion. Total penectomy was performed as a curative resection based on a diagnosis of isolated penile metastasis from rectal cancer. A histopathological examination revealed an increase of well differentiated adenocarcinoma in the corpus spongiosum consistent with his primary rectal tumor. The immunohistochemistry of the tumor cells demonstrated positive staining for cytokeratin 20 and negative staining for cytokeratin 7, which strongly supported a diagnosis of penile metastasis from the rectum. The patient is alive more than two years without any recurrence.

Keywords: Penile metastasis; Rectal cancer; Corpus spongiosum