Abstract / PDF

Skin Metastasis in a patient with Small-Cell Lung Cancer

Kamonpun Ussavarungsi MDa, Minji Kim BAb, Lukman Tijani MDc

Correspondence to Kamonpun Ussavarungsi MD.
Email: ussavarungsi.kamonpun@mayo.edu

+ Author Affiliation - Author Affiliation
a a fellow in pulmonary and critical care medicine at the Mayo Clinic Florida.
b a medical student at Texas Tech University Health Science Center in Lubbock, TX.
c an oncologist in the Department of Internal Medicine at TTUHSC in Lubbock, TX.

SWRCCC 2013;1.(1):35-38
doi: 10.12746/swrccc2013.0101.011

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Abstract

A 64-year-old woman presented with abdominal pain and back pain. Physical examination revealed a subcutaneous nodule in the anterior abdominal wall. An ultrasound-guided biopsy revealed small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC), and additional workup revealed extensive stage small cell lung carcinoma with involvement of the left lung and the abdominal viscera. The patient underwent chemotherapy with a good initial response. Lung carcinoma infrequently metastasizes to the skin. However, these lesions, when present, have important prognostic implications since these patients typically respond poorly to chemotherapy and have a mean survival of about five months. Careful skin evaluation is essential in the evaluation of patients with possible bronchogenic carcinoma.

Keywords: bronchogenic carcinoma, neoplasm metastasis, skin neoplasm, small cell lung cancer (SCLC)

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Introduction

Cutaneous metastases of lung cancer are infrequent but have important diagnostic and prognostic value.  Rarely, skin changes are the initial signs of underlying lung cancer, and common sites include the chest, back, abdomen, head, and neck. These metastases are usually single or multiple painless nodules that may be mobile or fixed. While the skin metastasis rate of large cell lung carcinoma is high, it is low for the squamous and small cell lung carcinomas. A definitive diagnosis can be made by a biopsy of the skin lesion with histological analysis.  Lung cancer patients who present with cutaneous metastasis have a poor prognosis, with a mean survival of approximately five months.  We present a rare case of cutaneous metastasis in a patient with small cell lung cancer.


Case

A 64-year-old woman with a past history of hypertension and tobacco abuse presented to the Emergency center with severe abdominal pain and back pain for two months. The abdominal pain was cramping and radiated to the back. There were no exacerbating or relieving factors. She denied fever, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, chest pain, dyspnea, and cough. She had decreased appetite, fatigue, and generalized weakness but no weight loss.

On examination, vital signs included a temperature of 97.5°F, a heart rate of 95 beats/min, a respiratory rate of 20 breaths/min, BP of 178/95 mmHg, and O2 saturation of 96 % on room air. General examination showed a mildly confused middle-aged white female who was not in acute distress. She had no palpable lymphadenopathy.  Her heart and lungs were within normal limits. The abdomen was soft with no tenderness. There was a nontender palpable subcutaneous mass approximately two cm in diameter in the left upper anterior abdominal wall.

Laboratory studies included  hemoglobin level 13.8 g/dl, white blood cell count 12,500 /µL, potassium 3.7 mmol/l, chloride 93 mmol/l, bicarbonate 30 mmol/l, BUN 9 mg/dl, creatinine 0.4 mg/dl, calcium 9.4 mg/dl, albumin 3.5 g/dl, AST 36 units/l, ALT 12 units/l, and  alkaline phosphatase 85 units/l. Serum amylase was elevated at 135 units/l (25-100 units/L), lipase 427 units/l (10-52 units/L), CEA 31 ng/ml ( 0.2-3.4 ng/ml), and  CA 19-9 34.1 units/ml ( 0.6-35 units/ml).  Urinalysis was normal.

The patient’s chest radiograph exhibited left hilar and perihilar densities (Figure 1). A CT scan of the chest showed a large left hilar and perihilar mass measuring 10 cm with encasement of the left main bronchus and right pulmonary artery and mediastinal extension with mediastinal lymphadenopathy (Figure 2). A  CT of the abdomen and pelvis with and without contrast showed multiple hypodense lesions in the liver of approximately one cm in size, a solid mass in the pancreatic body, a lobulated anterior lower pole of the right kidney, bilateral adrenal nodules, and retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy. An ultrasound-guided biopsy was obtained from the subcutaneous mass in the left mid abdominal wall and revealed small cell carcinoma of the lung (Figures 3 and 4). A bone scan was negative. The patient was diagnosed with cT4N2M1b Extensive stage SCLC. Her abdominal pain was due to acute pancreatitis.

 

Figure1

Figure 1 Portable chest radiograph revealed left hilar and perihilar density.

Figure2

Figure 2 Large heterogeneous enhancing left hilar and perihilar mass measuring 10 cm with encasement of the left main bronchus and right pulmonary artery. Distal atelectasis and consolidation of the left upper and lower lobes. Enlarged confluent mediastinal lymph nodes.


A CT of her head with contrast revealed an eight mm mass in the left cerebral peduncle. Whole brain radiation and dexamethasone were started immediately with a marked improvement of her mental status.

She received four cycles of doublet chemotherapy with Platinum and tolerated it well. CT scans of the brain, chest, and abdomen were repeated during follow-up and revealed no evidence of brain metastasis, smaller left hilar nodes, a smaller left upper lobe pulmonary nodule, and minimal, if any, hepatic, renal, or adrenal disease. The subcutaneous nodule also resolved.

However, her disease progressed; she was started on IV topotecan, but could not tolerate it because of poor performance status, and was referred to hospice.


Figure3

Figure 3 Subcutaneous mass tissue biopsy. Hematoxylin and eosin stain reveals black, variably sized nuclei within scant cytoplasm, molding and crush artifact.

 Figure4

Figure 4 Immunohistochemistry with synaptophysin was positive.


Discussion

SCLC arises from bronchial epithelial cells and is related to the neuroendocrine Kulchitsky cells, a type of intestinal epithelial cells. SCLC is fatal and most patients die within one year of presentation, with median survival for extensive stage disease being 6-8 months.18 SCLC has a tendency to progress rapidly and to metastasize early and extensively. Common metastatic sites include lung, liver, bone, adrenal gland and central nervous system.19

Cutaneous metastases from the lung are not very common and indicate a poorer prognosis. The percentage of patients with lung cancer who develop skin metastasis ranges from 1-12%.9 Between 7-24% of these patients have cutaneous lesions as an initial sign of malignancy.10 Patients often present with nodules which can be single or multiple and varied in size; less common lesions include papules, plaques, ulcerations, and sclerodermoid lesions.9,11 Lung cancer with cutaneous metastasis usually involves the anterior chest, abdomen, head, neck, and back.11 Adenocarcinoma and large cell carcinoma have a higher incidence of cutaneous metastasis than squamous cell and small cell carcinoma.11 In addition, lung cancer in the upper lobes has a higher tendency to develop cutaneous metastasis.12 Patients with metastatic skin lesions usually have other internal visceral metastases and have a poor prognosis.  Reported mean survival after skin metastasis is approximately five months.13 Patients who present with skin lesions earlier have a lower survival rate than patients who develop skin metastasis later in the disease course.14

Various diagnostic and treatment modalities are involved in the next steps of patient management.  Biopsy of skin lesions is an important component in making the diagnosis of lung cancer with cutaneous metastasis.  The histological subtype can be diagnosed by biopsy, and imaging with chest radiographs and computed tomography is used to identify the primary site.  Staging is done by PET/CT and MRI of the brain.

Treatment of solitary skin metastasis includes surgery combined with either or both chemotherapy and radiation; multiple cutaneous lesions may be better treated with chemotherapy.10 Patients with resectable skin lesions have better survival than those with multiple, non-resectable sites and are candidates for surgery.15 When the metastases are multiple, chemotherapy is used as the initial treatment. For extensive stage SCLC, the combination of Etoposide and Cisplatin is the standard first-line chemotherapy regimen. However, to reduce toxicity, especially in patients with extensive disease who cannot tolerate cisplatin, carboplatin can be substituted for cisplatin. Kamble et al reported an initial reduction in nodule size when patients were treated with chemotherapy consisting of cisplatin, VP-16, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and vincristine, but the skin lesions later progressed.17 Due to the aggressive nature of lung cancer with cutaneous metastasis, both chemotherapy and radiation therapy may be effective only as palliative treatment.17


Key points

References

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Received: 11/15/2012
Accepted: 01/31/2013
Reviewers: Kenneth Nugent, MD, Rishi Raj, MD
Published electronically: 01/31/2013
Conflict of Interest Disclosures: none

 

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