Abstract
Spontaneous rupture of a metastatic liver tumour is rarely documented in the literature when compared to hepatocellular carcinoma and other liver lesions, especially from a lung primary. We report a case of ruptured liver metastasis from an adenocarcinoma of the lung mimicking ruptured liver abscess, challenging the clinical diagnosis. A 42-year-female patient presented to a tertiary care institute in 2020 with complaints of abdominal pain, breathlessness and fever. On examination, the patient was tachypnoeic with a right hypochondriac mass. A contrast-enhanced computed tomography of abdomen and thorax revealed an ill-defined heterogeneously enhancing lesion in the liver with a communicating subcapsular collection and hypo-enhancing lesions in the left lobe and heterogeneously enhancing lesion in the left lung. Adenocarcinoma of the lung with hepatic metastasis was confirmed with a core needle biopsy. The patient was managed conservatively with intravenous antibiotics, intercostal drainage tube and gefitinib. However, despite best efforts, the patient succumbed to the disease.
Article Type
Case Report
Publication Date
8-25-2022
First Page
421
Last Page
425
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Jayanth, K S.; Madan, Shivakumar; Sureshkumar, Balakrishnan; Sathasivam; Anandhi, Amaranathan; G, Rajesh N.; and Kate, Vikram
(2022)
"The Diagnostic Dilemma of Ruptured Liver Metastasis in a Patient with Lung Cancer,"
Sultan Qaboos University Medical Journal: Vol. 22: 421-425.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.18295/squmj.6.2021.091