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Synchronous lung adenocarcinoma associated with bullous lung disease
Synchronous lung adenocarcinoma associated with bullous lung disease
Ahmet Başoğlu, Ayşen Taslak Şengül, Yasemin Bilgin Büyükkarabacak, Tülin Durgun Yetim
Department of Thoracic Surgery, Medicine Faculty of Ondokuz Mayıs University, Samsun
The relationship between lung cancer and bullous lung diseases
has been described in the literature. Herein, we presented
a 45-year-old male patient who was asymptomatic when bilateral
bullae and bilateral synchronous primary lung adenocarcinoma
were detected. Computed tomography revealed a giant
bulla in the upper right lobe with a nodular lesion in the bulla
wall, and multiple bullae in the upper left lobe with a nodule
in the parenchyma adjacent to the bulla. Initially, malignancy
was not considered. Pulmonary function test was restrictive.
Thoracotomy was performed for the giant bulla in the right
upper lobe. Frozen section analysis of the nodular lesion in
the bulla wall revealed poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma.
Upper right lobectomy was performed. Mediastinal lymphadenopathy
was not observed. Two weeks later, the patient
underwent a left thoracotomy for the intraparenchymal nodule.
Adenocarcinoma was reported on frozen section analysis and
upper left lobectomy was performed. Following surgery, the
patient received chemotherapy. No recurrences were detected
within a follow-up period of 20 months. This is an interesting
case showing the relationship between bullous disease and
lung cancer, reminding that bilateral synchronous primary
lung cancer may be encountered in bullous lung disease.
Keywords : Adenocarcinoma; blister/complications; lung diseases; lung neoplasms; neoplasms, multiple primary
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