https://www.selleckchem.com/products/urmc-099.html Herein, we report a case of laparoscopic surgery for sigmoid lymph node metastases after surgery for rectal cancer. A 58- year-old man underwent laparoscopic surgery for rectal cancer. He underwent D2 lymph node dissection, and he was undergoing dialysis for renal disease as a complication of diabetes. CT imaging performed 15 months after surgery revealed recurrence of tumors in the sigmoid lymph nodes. Subsequently, laparoscopic removal of the sigmoid lymph nodes was planned, as the patient had no tumor recurrence at any other location, and because his condition was not suitable for chemotherapy. The postoperative course was uneventful, and the patient was discharged a few days after surgery.The patient was a 77-year-old woman. She underwent a partial gastrectomy at the age of 40, and a partial colectomy at the age of 75 following a diagnosis of a carcinoid. In November 2019, a 1.5 cm mass with a clear boundary was found in the pancreatic tail, which was strongly stained uniformly. And furthermore, multiple masses between 2 cm and 3 cm with a clear boundary was found inside liver segment S1 and S6 and S7 and S8 on CT, which was strongly stained at the edge in the early phase and was seen as a low density area in the late phase. At a result of image examination, it was diagnosed as a pancreatic tail neuroendocrine tumor and its multiple liver metastases. The distal pancreatectomy, posterior segmentectomy, and partial S1 lt and S8 liver resection were performed. With postoperative pathological diagnosis, the pancreatic tumor was accessory spleen, and liver tumor were epithelioid type GIST which were positive for CD34 and PDGFRA and negative for c- kit. The pathology specimen of colectomy was re-examined, and the diagnosis from the previous surgery was changed to GIST from a carcinoid. Epithelioid type GIST was associated with a PDGFRA gene mutation and was known to have many gastric origins. Based on the clinical cou