An oncological disease, as a result of which a neoplasm occurs secondarily in existing compactions and hyperemias that accompany lesions in a primary tumor of another location. Upon examination, they are revealed as “daughter” neoplasms and often have features characteristic of the latter, which served as their place of “stay.”
The reasons for the development of this type of neoplasm in a cancer patient primarily include late detection of the primary tumor, its aggressive course with rapidly increasing pain, signs of endotoxin