Floor-of-mouth metastasis in colorectal cancer

Colorectal cancers have potential for lymphatic and hematogenous metastases. Surgery is the definitive treatment, but the prognosis can be improved with the addition of chemotherapy, radiotherapy or both. However, the incidence of recurrence, both local and distant, remains significant. Distant metastases occur most often in the liver and lung; however, metastases to bone, adrenals, lymph nodes, brain, skin and the oral region have been reported. Metastases to the oral region are uncommon and may occur in the oral soft tissues or jaw bones. The prognosis in such patients is usually very poor. We report a case of colorectal carcinoma with metastasis to the floor of the mouth. This is probably the first reported case of metastasis to the floor of the mouth in a patient with colorectal cancer.

M etastatic spread from colorectal carcinoma is quite predictable, and is initially by the lymphatic route, followed by the hematogenous route. The commonest sites for distant metastases are liver and lung. Metastatic tumors in the oral region are uncommon and account for approximately 1% of all malignant oral tumors. 1 Metastases in the oral region can occur in oral soft tissues or the jawbones. Metastatic tumors in the jawbones are more frequently reported than those in the oral mucosa (by a ratio of 2.5:1). The most common primary sources of metastatic tumors in the oral region are cancers in the breast, lung, kidney, bone or colorectum. 1 We report a case of metastasis to the floor of mouth from colorectal carcinoma.

CASE
A 42-year-old woman was admitted in December 2003 with a 10-day history of blood and mucus in the stool. Rectal examination and endoscopic evaluation showed a circumferential lesion that began 4 cm above the anal verge and caused an obstruction. A CT scan of the abdomen demonstrated a mass of 4.5 cm in length with filling defect. A transanal incisional biopsy was performed. Histologic examination revealed an adenocarcinoma. The patient underwent anteroposterior resection with total mesorectal excision. Histological ex-

Floor-of-mouth metastasis in colorectal cancer
Singh Tejinder, a Usha Amirtham, b Satheesh C. T., a K. C. Lakshmaiah, a T. M. Suresh, a K. Govind Babu, a C. Ramachandra c Colorectal cancers have potential for lymphatic and hematogenous metastases. Surgery is the definitive treatment, but the prognosis can be improved with the addition of chemotherapy, radiotherapy or both. However, the incidence of recurrence, both local and distant, remains significant. Distant metastases occur most often in the liver and lung; however, metastases to bone, adrenals, lymph nodes, brain, skin and the oral region have been reported. Metastases to the oral region are uncommon and may occur in the oral soft tissues or jaw bones. The prognosis in such patients is usually very poor. We report a case of colorectal carcinoma with metastasis to the floor of the mouth. This is probably the first reported case of metastasis to the floor of the mouth in a patient with colorectal cancer.
amination revealed a mucinous adenocarcinoma of the rectum extending through the whole muscular layer with invasion of the serosa (Figure 1). There was nodal involvement (two lymph nodes), and it was staged T3N1M0. Postoperatively, she received a course of radiotherapy (RT) consisting of 50 Gy in 25 fractions to the whole pelvis. Following RT, she received 6 cycles of 5-fluorouracil/leucovorin. She remained symptom free until January 2007. She was readmitted with per-    (Figure 2). A punch biopsy was performed. Histopathological examination revealed a well-differentiated adenocarcinoma (Figure 3), and the original primary and floor-of-mouth metastases were morphologically similar. She was treated with chemotherapy regimen consisting of FOLFOX4 with bevacizumab. Two cycles of chemotherapy elicited no response, and the growth was progressively increasing in size. Chemotherapy was stopped and she was treated with radiotherapy consisting of 64 Gy/32 Fr. She did

DISCUSSION
From available evidence, it is known that patients with disseminated colorectal cancer fare poorly, which was observed in the present case. Oral metastatic tumors are uncommon and comprise approximately 1% of all malignant oral neoplasms. 1 Most lesions are in the jawbones, and only 16% are in soft tissue, such as the gingival tissue. 2 The breast is the most common site for cancers that metastasize to the oral soft tissues in females ( Table 1). Few cases of metastasis to the oral cavity from colorectal carcinoma have been reported in literature ( Table 2). In most cases, the site of metastasis is gingival. Our case is unique in that probably this is the first case report of metastasis to the floor of mouth from colorectal carcinoma. Whereas early detection and surgery remain the main therapeutic options for adenocarcinoma of the