Biventricular cardiac metastasis from vulvar squamous cell carcinoma

Arch Clin Cases. 2022 Jul 7;9(2):62-68. doi: 10.22551/2022.35.0902.10205. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Vulvar cancers make up just 3% to 5% of all gynecological cancers, and they are most typically found in postmenopausal women. Vulvar cancer distant metastases are uncommon and usually arise late. Only six cases of vulvar cancer metastasizing to the heart have been reported in the literature, and none of them included both the left and right ventricles. We describe the case of a 68-year-old patient diagnosed with vulvar cancer arising from lichen sclerosus, initially localized, treated with chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation therapy. Less than two months after the end of the treatment sequence, the patient returned to our clinic with bone pain. Imaging investigations have shown multiple disseminated metastases, but not in the heart at that moment. Chemotherapy was initiated, and after two cycles, the patient developed an arrhythmia (atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular rate), which was later determined to be caused by cardiac metastases discovered by echocardiography and computed tomography. Vulvar cancer metastatic to the heart represents a rare clinical condition, requiring multidisciplinary care. The case's uniqueness is the biventricular metastasis, which resulted in STEMI despite angiographically normal epicardial coronary arteries.

Keywords: cardiac metastasis; heart arrhythmia; natural history; vulvar squamous cell carcinoma.

Publication types

  • Case Reports