A 23-year-old male presented with a three-week-history of crampy abdominal pain and melaena. Colonoscopy revealed a friable mass filling the entire lumen of the cecum; histologically, it was classified as perivascular epithelioid cell tumor (PEComa). An magnetic resonance imaging scan showed, in addition to the primary tumor, two large mesenteric lymph node metastases and four metastatic lesions in the liver. The patient underwent right hemicolectomy and left hemihepatectomy combined with wedge resections of metastases in the right lobe of the liver, the resection status was R0. Subsequently, the patient was treated with sirolimus. After 4 mo of adjuvant mammalian target of rapamycin inhibition he developed two new liver metastases and a local pelvic recurrence. The visible tumor formations were again excised surgically, this time the resection status was R2 with regard to the pelvic recurrence. The patient was treated with 12 cycles of doxorubicin and ifosfamide under which the disease was stable for 9 mo. The clinical course was then determined by rapid tumor growth in the pelvic cavity. Second line chemotherapy with gemcitabine and docetaxel was ineffective, and the patient died 23 mo after the onset of disease. This case report adds evidence that, in malignant PEComa, the mainstay of treatment is curative surgery. If not achievable, the effects of adjuvant or palliative chemotherapy are unpredictable.
A 29-year-old man presented with abdominal cramps and bloody diarrhoea. Blood tests revealed elevated C-reactive protein (21.3 mg/dL; normal range 0.01 - 0. 82 mg/dL) and white blood cells (28200/μL, normal range 4000 - 10000/μL). Stool tests were negative for enteropathogenic bacteria and Clostridium difficile toxins A/B. Ultrasound and computed tomography showed massive swelling of the transverse colon and right colonic flexure. At endoscopy, circular necrosis of the mucosa was encountered in the proximal segments of the colon whereas distal parts of the organ showed patchy inflammation of minor severity. Extended stool testing identified Escherichia coli type O104:H4 as the causative microorganism. There was no evidence for haemolytic uraemic syndrome. Under conservative treatment the patient recovered clinically, serologically and endoscopically. At follow-up endoscopy, longitudinal ulcers and vital mucosa were present. In this case report the segmental pattern of mucosal necrosis in a patient with EHEC infection is noteworthy.
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