Sunday Poster Session
Category: Colon

Brian Donahue, BA
University of Virginia School of Medicine
Charlottesville, VA
A 77 year-old woman with a past medical history of heart failure and muscular dystrophy presented to the emergency department with abdominal pain. She also reported constipation, nausea, diaphoresis, a 25-pound weight loss, and generalized abdominal pain over the course of the last year. A CT scan of her abdomen from one year prior showed no masses, while colonoscopy from six months prior found three polyps: two tubular adenomas (6mm and 10mm) and one sessile serrated polyp (12mm).
On admission, a CT abdomen pelvis with IV contrast revealed a large, irregular mass within the distal rectum at the anal verge measuring 6.6 cm by 4.0 cm with numerous large hepatic lesions, suggestive of a primary colonic neoplasm with hepatic metastasis. The patient then underwent diagnostic colonoscopy which showed a fungating and ulcerated non-obstructing large mass in the rectum just proximal to the anal verge. Biopsies were taken and returned positive for anorectal melanoma. General surgery and medical oncology were consulted for further management recommendations, however the patient opted for hospice care given her poor prognosis.

