A 70-year-old man who had undergone esophagectomy with reconstructive surgery using a portion of the stomach 5 years earlier for esophageal cancer was admitted to our hospital after a routine endoscopy and histological examination of a biopsy specimen revealed poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma in the stomach. A gastrectomy and intrathoracic esophagojejunostomy was performed on January 20, 1993; however, the patient suffered a cerebral infarction and died of septic shock on April 9, 1993. At autopsy, metastatic tumors were macroscopically observed in various organs, including a bone tumor measuring 1.0 cm in diameter in the L4 vertebra. To clarify the origin of the bone tumor, we conducted histological and immunohistochemical examinations. Histological examination revealed a mixture of osteoclast-like giant cells (OGCs) and poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma cells, although no histologic features of OGCs were observed either in a primary site or in any of the multiple metastatic lesions. On immunohistochemistry, adenocarcinoma cells in the bone stained positively for the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), whereas no staining for CEA was observed in the OGCs which demonstrated negative staining for all the antigens of epithelial markers. These findings led us to conclude that this bone tumor had metastasized from the stomach cancer and that the OGCs may have originated from mesenchymal cells reacting to the adenocarcinoma cells.