A case of multiple bone metastases during the course of non‐invasive bladder and prostate cancer

Introduction Secondary bladder tumor is rare. We report a case of a bladder tumor initially thought to be a recurrence of non‐muscle invasive bladder cancer that was ultimately identified as metastasis from gastric cancer treated 16 years prior. Case presentation A 75‐year‐old male with a history of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Keisuke Matsubara, Nozomi Hayakawa, Yohei Kubota, Nobuyuki Ohike, Yu Sunakawa, Junki Koike, Eiji Kikuchi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-03-01
Series:IJU Case Reports
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/iju5.12836
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Summary:Introduction Secondary bladder tumor is rare. We report a case of a bladder tumor initially thought to be a recurrence of non‐muscle invasive bladder cancer that was ultimately identified as metastasis from gastric cancer treated 16 years prior. Case presentation A 75‐year‐old male with a history of gastric, prostate, and recurrent non‐muscle invasive bladder cancer was diagnosed to have multiple bone metastases. Open bone biopsy and cancer gene panel testing identified the primary origin of the metastases as gastric cancer. Retrospective evaluation revealed that what was initially suspected as recurrent bladder tumors were actually metastases from the gastric cancer. Conclusion In cases of metastases with an unknown primary origin, detailed evaluation, including biopsy of the metastatic lesion and genomic testing, is recommended.
ISSN:2577-171X