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.
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, KS; Madan, Shivakumar; Gurushankari, Balakrishnan; Sureshkumar, Sathasivam; Anandhi, Amaranathan; NG, Rajesh; 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