Main Article Content

Abstract

Metastatic breast cancer (MBC) represents 5-10% of newly diagnosed breast cancer cases, referred to as de novo stage IV MBC. Distinguishing a distant lesion in breast cancer patients can be challenging. Therefore, obtaining a histopathological confirmation of a metastasis is advisable, as a suspicious metastatic lesion may turn out to be benign or exhibit different immunohistochemistry compared to the primary site. In this case, we describe a woman undergoing staging scans for newly diagnosed breast cancer, where radiological findings suggested appendix metastasis. However, subsequent laparoscopic appendicectomy revealed an appendicular schwannoma, confirmed through immunohistochemistry. The patient then received curative-intent breast cancer treatment. With the increasing use of advanced staging scans in breast cancer, clinicians should thoroughly investigate and confirm metastatic disease, especially in uncommon metastatic sites, before initiating treatment.


Keywords: Schwannoma, metastasis, breast cancer, appendix.

Article Details

How to Cite
Al-Ishaq, Z., Al-Sulaimani, A., Al-Qassabi, B. S., AlRahbi, F., Al Baimani, K., Muhammad, J. Z., & Aljarrah, A. (2024). Schwannoma of the Appendix Mimicking a Metastatic Breast Cancer: A case report. Sultan Qaboos University Medical Journal, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.18295/squmj.6.2024.041

Most read articles by the same author(s)