Metastasis to the gastrointestinal tract is rare. We performed a retrospective analysis to identify patients with metastatic disease to the gastrointestinal tract using two databases containing pathology results from all endoscopic procedures conducted by nearly 200 gastroenterologists in a community setting over a 14-year period. Forty-nine patients were diagnosed with metastasis to the gastrointestinal tract by endoscopy during the study period. Most were women (71%). The most common metastases to the gastrointestinal tract identified by endoscopy were breast cancers (n ¼ 18), followed by melanomas (n ¼ 12), ovarian cancers (n ¼ 7), kidney cancers (n ¼ 5), prostate cancers (n ¼ 2), lung cancer (n ¼ 1), and pancreatic cancer (n ¼ 1). Three patients had unknown primary sites. Among women, the three leading known primary tumor sites were breast, ovary, and melanoma. Among men, the three leading primary tumor sites were melanoma, kidney, and prostate. The stomach was the most common portion of the gastrointestinal tract involved by metastases. Most affected women and were most frequently encountered in the stomach. KEYWORDS Breast cancer; endoscopy; melanoma C ancers most commonly metastasize to lymph nodes, liver, and lungs. 1 Brain and bone are also common metastatic sites. Metastases to the gastrointestinal (GI) tract are rare. Most of these GI metastases are asymptomatic and are detected incidentally by imaging or on autopsy. The most common extra-abdominal tumors that have been reported to metastasize to the GI tract are melanomas, breast cancers, and lung cancers. 2 Though any portion of the GI tract can be the site of a metastasis, the small intestine and stomach are the more commonly reported sites. 3,4 Gilg et al 5 recently reported a retrospective database analysis of 217 patients with so-called secondary tumors of the GI tract seen over 30 years at a large academic medical center in Graz, Austria. Melanoma and breast cancer were the most common primary sites for these 95 metastases to the GI tract via lymphovascular spread. Our retrospective study aimed to elucidate the gender-related incidence of metastatic disease to the GI tract in a community gastroenterology practice and hospital in Texas, consisting of nearly 200 gastroenterologists.