Bulky Isolated Adrenal Metastasis as First Presentation of Occult Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) in a Patient with a Synchronous Squamous Carcinoma of the Tongue.
Marco Lodin, Alberto Ragni, Valerio Renzelli, Maura Rossi, Elena Silvia Traverso, Marco Gallo
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Abstract
Background: The diagnostic workup of an adrenal mass should always rule out the possibility of an adrenal metastasis, especially in a patient followed-up for a known primitive cancer. Sometimes, however, the incidental finding of a bulky lesion in a cancer patient can lead to the unexpected diagnosis of metastasis from a second occult cancer. Here, we report the case of a voluminous, isolated left adrenal metastasis from unknown and persistently occult hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), incidentally found during the follow-up for squamous carcinoma of the tongue.
Case description: A 72-year-old HBV/HCV-negative male patient with a history of alcohol abuse was referred to our hospital for gastric bleeding. Some weeks before, the patient was operated on for a locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue, which required cervical lymph node neck dissection, temporary tracheostomy, jejunostomy, and plastic reconstruction. Subsequent diagnostic imaging revealed a left adrenal mass sized 9x15 cm with suspicious features. The hormonal workout was negative for pheochromocytoma and a hyperfunctioning adrenal lesion. The patient underwent laparotomic left adrenalectomy. The exploration of the liver was compatible with alcoholic cirrhosis and did not reveal any other palpable lesion. The adrenal mass histologically turned out to be a poorly differentiated G3 HCC. Subsequent radiological exams were unable to identify the primary liver lesion or any other neoplasms. Conversely, α-FP levels were initially high but reduced after treatment with sorafenib. After 2 years of follow-up, the patient is alive and well, albeit with evidence of locoregional inter-aortocaval lymphadenopathy. The primary HCC has never been identified, thus suggesting the hypothesis of a diffuse cirrhosis-like HCC.
Conclusion: The suspicion of an adrenal metastasis in a patient with primary cancer with a low potential for adrenal metastatic spreading must raise the diagnostic suspect for another synchronous occult cancer beyond that for primary adrenal cancer. HCC can rarely first manifest as a metastatic adrenal lesion.