Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Primary spindle cell sarcoma of the gallbladder is a rare condition. PATIENT CONCERNS: A 67-year-old woman was admitted to a local hospital with a chief complaint of abdominal pain in the right upper quadrant for the past 2 months. DIAGNOSIS AND INTERVENTION: Surgical resection was performed following the diagnosis of primary gallbladder sarcoma with local hepatic metastasis. Histological examination confirmed a diagnosis of primary spindle cell sarcoma and hepatic metastasis with simultaneous cholecystolithiasis. OUTCOMES: Adjuvant chemoradiation therapy was not performed because the patient refused treatment. Three months after the surgery, a relapsed lesion was diagnosed. The patient underwent transcatheter arterial chemoembolization. CONCLUSIONS: The disease should be differentially diagnosed from gallbladder carcinoma or carcinosarcoma with hepatic metastasis. An aggressive surgical approach should be based on a balance between the risk of surgery and the outcome.