_____________________________________________________________________________________________________ *Corresponding author: E-mail: aniradonc@gmail.com; International Journal of Medical and Pharmaceutical Case Reports 8(3): 1-4, 2016; Article no.IJMPCR.31775 ISSN: 2394-109X, NLM ID: 101648033 SCIENCEDOMAIN international www.sciencedomain.org Skin as a Site of Recurrence in Carcinoma Ovary- An Unusual Presentation Divyesh Kumar 1 , Anindya Mukherjee 1* , Nandita Gupta 2 , Bhavana Rai 1 and Sushmita Ghoshal 1 1 Department of Radiotherapy and Oncology, PGIMER, Chandigarh, India. 2 Department of Cytopathology, PGIMER, Chandigarh, India. Authors’ contributions This work was carried out in collaboration between all authors. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Article Information DOI: 10.9734/IJMPCR/2016/31775 Editor(s): (1) Rahul S. Khupse, Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Findlay, USA. Reviewers: (1) Mohammed A. Osman, General Organization of Teaching Hospitals, Cairo, Egypt. (2) Antonios-Apostolos K. Tentes, Didimotichon General Hospital, Didimotichon, Greece. (3) Yahya Elshimali, Charles Drew University and UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California, USA. Complete Peer review History: http://www.sciencedomain.org/review-history/17898 Received 24 th January 2017 Accepted 13 th February 2017 Published 20 th February 2017 ABSTRACT Cutaneous metastases from various malignancies have been reported in literature but skin as a site of recurrence in cancer ovary has been seldom reported. We hereby report one such case of a 47 year old, follow up case of ovarian cancer, which progressed after two lines of chemotherapy and presented with abdominal skin nodule as site of metastatic recurrence, nearly 32 months after diagnosis of ovarian cancer. Keywords: Cutaneous metastases; refractory ovarian cancer; recurrence. 1. INTRODUCTION Cutaneous metastasis is a late presentation in ovarian carcinoma which is rarely encountered. Heavy disease burden like bulky abdominal nodes or peritoneal carcinomatosis are known risk factors for this entity. The prognosis of such cases is uniformly poor and the gap between Case Study