Cystic hepatic metastasis

Case contributed by Matt A. Morgan , 12 Dec 2014
Diagnosis certain
Changed by Matt A. Morgan, 18 Dec 2014

Updates to Case Attributes

Status changed from draft to published (public).
Published At was set to .
Body was changed:

This case is designed to encourage you to keep an open mind. Given the patient's history of immunosuppression, the presence of a single new cystic lesion in the liver was definitively called an abscess on an earlier study. The patient was sent to ultrasound-guided biopsy to determine the infectious agent for targeted antiobioticantibiotic therapy. The pathology report from the FNA smears and core biopsy told a different story, however:

"Metastatic, poorly-differentiated adenocarcinoma in a background of extensive necrosis and mixed inflammation."

The primary was consistent with an upper GI or pancreatic source, although this could not be seen on the available imaging.

TheIn the differential for a new cystic lesion in the liver in an adult liver, one should always containconsider both infectious and metastatic aetiologies. With multiple lesions, a metastatic aetiology is much more likely (~98%), but lack of multiple lesions is more ambiguous.

  • -<p>This case is to encourage you to keep an open mind. Given the patient's history of immunosuppression, the presence of a single new cystic lesion in the liver was definitively called an abscess on an earlier study. The patient was sent to ultrasound-guided biopsy to determine the infectious agent for targeted antiobiotic therapy. The pathology report from the FNA smears and core biopsy told a different story, however:</p><p>"Metastatic, poorly-differentiated adenocarcinoma in a background of extensive necrosis and mixed inflammation."</p><p>The primary was consistent with an upper GI or pancreatic source, although this could not be seen on the available imaging.</p><p>The differential for a new cystic lesion in the liver in an adult should always contain both infectious and metastatic aetiologies. </p>
  • +<p>This case is designed to encourage you to keep an open mind. Given the patient's history of immunosuppression, the presence of a single new cystic lesion in the liver was definitively called an abscess on an earlier study. The patient was sent to ultrasound-guided biopsy to determine the infectious agent for targeted antibiotic therapy. The pathology report from the FNA smears and core biopsy told a different story, however:</p><p>"Metastatic, poorly-differentiated adenocarcinoma in a background of extensive necrosis and mixed inflammation."</p><p>The primary was consistent with an upper GI or pancreatic source, although this could not be seen on the available imaging.</p><p>In the differential for a new cystic lesion in an adult liver, one should always consider both infectious and metastatic aetiologies. With multiple lesions, a metastatic aetiology is much more likely (~98%), but lack of multiple lesions is more ambiguous.</p>
Age changed from 58Y to 50-60Y.
Diagnostic Certainty was set to .

Updates to Study Attributes

Findings was changed:

CoreUltrasound-guided core biopsy ultrasound image.

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