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FDG PET/CT reveals bone marrow oligometastasis in laryngeal squamous carcinoma: a case report with favorable outcome. BJR Case Rep 2023 Nov;9(6):20230065

Date

11/06/2023

Pubmed ID

37928713

Pubmed Central ID

PMC10621579

DOI

10.1259/bjrcr.20230065

Abstract

Laryngeal carcinoma is the most common head and neck cancer. The vast majority of laryngeal carcinomas are of squamous-cell histologic type. Metastasis of laryngeal cancer typically occurs within the cervical lymph nodes and seldom in other regions. Although a small percentage of patients experience distant metastases, bone marrow metastasis from laryngeal cancer is among the least common metastatic sites. Previous literature has suggested that bone marrow carcinomatosis is aggressive and has a poor outcome, particularly in patients with supraglottic tumors. Ante-mortem diagnosis of this metastatic pattern has been limited. To our knowledge, this case report highlights the first documented occurrence wherein the utilization of 18-fluorine fludeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/CT imaging played a pivotal role in the early detection of bone marrow metastasis in a patient diagnosed with transglottic laryngeal cancer. A solitary metastatic distant bone marrow lesion was identified early during follow-up. As a consequence, the patient exhibited a remarkable and unforeseen favorable clinical outcome.

Author List

Al-Ibraheem A, Al-Adhami DA, Abdlkadir AS, Mohamad I, Ghatasheh H, Qandeel M

Author

Monther Qandeel MBChB Assistant Professor in the Radiology department at Medical College of Wisconsin