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CASE REPORT

At a glans: metastatic prostate cancer disguised as penile squamous cell carcinoma; a case report

Ramya Narasimhan1, Kikuye Sugiyama2,*, Joanna Wang3, Ricardo Munarriz3, Carmen Sarita-Reyes1
1 Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA
2 Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA
3 Department of Urology, Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA
* Corresponding Author: Kikuye Sugiyama. Email: email
(This article belongs to the Special Issue: Prostate Cancer: Biomarkers, Diagnosis and Treatment)

Canadian Journal of Urology https://doi.org/10.32604/cju.2026.072310

Received 24 August 2025; Accepted 11 February 2026; Published online 19 March 2026

Abstract

Background: The incidence rate of prostate adenocarcinoma in the United States was 112 per 100,000 in 2019. Men aged 65 to 74 years had a higher incidence rate (638 per 100,000), and 70% of the cases were detected locally (confined to the primary site) per the United States Cancer Statistics. While rare, prostate adenocarcinoma metastasis to the penis has variable presentation and potentially atypical histology that may require immunohistochemical, biomarker, and genetic analysis for confident diagnosis. Case Description: We present a 56-year-old patient with advanced prostate cancer post-chemoradiation and androgen deprivation therapy with an uncommon site of metastasis to the penis. The clinical presentation and progression of the disease led to surgical removal and frozen section analysis. Initial pathologic assessment proved equivocal in the distinction between metastatic prostatic carcinoma versus primary penile squamous cell carcinoma. Diagnostic difficulty due to ambiguous histomorphological features was attributed to the loss of intrinsic prostatic protein markers in metastatic post-treatment cases. Immunohistochemistry and detailed biomarker analysis eventually aided diagnosis. Conclusions: This report illustrates some of the gross and microscopic histological ambiguity that can obfuscate immediate diagnostic certainty of origin of rapidly growing cutaneous penile lesion in the context of existing prostate cancer, while elaborating on immunohistochemical and genetic markers that can increase otherwise elusive diagnostic certainty. Early patient education and intervention represent sites of potential improvement in management of similar cases.

Keywords

metastatic prostate cancer; penile metastasis; case report; differential diagnosis; immunohistochemistry; castrate-resistant prostate cancer; rare metastasis
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