ABSTRACT
Clinically curable adrenal metastases are rare. We treated a patient with gastric cancer and a synchronous adrenal metastasis who underwent curative resection. Upper GI examinations of a 75-year-old man revealed a Borrmann 3 gastric tumor in the proximal stomach. CT indicated a giant gastric tumor that invaded the pancreatic tail, and the left adrenal gland seemed normal. He was subjected to a total gastrectomy and a distal pancreatosplenectomy. Because a mass was palpated intraoperatively in the left adrenal gland, it was also removed. The gastric tumor was histopathologically a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma with scirrhous invasion that invaded the pancreas, and the histopathological findings of the left adrenal tumor were compatible with those of gastric cancer. At present, 6 years after the operation, there has been no clear sign of cancer recurrence. It may be rational to excise the left adrenal gland en bloc in patients with serosa-positive Borrmann 3-4 gastric cancer.