| Literature DB >> 21663639 |
Claudia Otto1, Abbas Agaimy, Alexander Braun, Jochen Rädecke, Jens Hoeppner, Gerald Illerhaus, Martin Werner, Udo Kontny, Florian Haller.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are the most frequent mesenchymal tumors of the gastrointestinal tract usually occurring in the 6th to 7th decade of life, while their occurrence in children is rare (1-2%). Carney triad (CT), a non-hereditary association of gastric GIST with pulmonary chondroma and/or extraadrenal paraganglioma, is an even much rarer disease (to date ~120 cases reported worldwide) usually affecting young adult females. Pediatric GISTs differ from CT-associated GISTs solely by the absence of other components of the triad and are completely different from sporadic GISTs of the adult. Both, pediatric and CT-GISTs, metastasize frequently to regional lymph nodes (29%) and are usually wild type (WT) for common KIT-/PDGFRA mutations. CASE PRESENTATION ANDEntities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21663639 PMCID: PMC3130635 DOI: 10.1186/1746-1596-6-52
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Figure 1The primary tumor of the CT-GIST (case 1) showed a biphasic histomorphological growth pattern with spindled and epithelioid cells (a, H&E staining). Immunohistochemistry revealed an intensive predominantly membranous staining with C-KIT (b) and CD34 (d). The liver metastases revealed small nests and "Zellballen" of tumor cells with epithelioid growth pattern (c, H&E staining). The paraganglioma showed a characteristic nested pattern (e, H&E staining). Note similarity to hepatic metastasis from GIST in c.
Figure 2Magnetic resonance tomography in case 2 showed an exophytic, lobulated and ulcerated antral mass diagnosed as gastric GIST with multiple smaller satellite tumor nodules, liver (a, b) and lymph node metastases (f) (H&E staining). Histology reveals biphasic histomorphological growth pattern (c) with fibromuscular septa (d) and hypercellularity (e) (H&E staining).
Figure 3The histomorphological growth pattern of the liver metastasis in case 3 showed a hypercellular tumor (a) with plasmacytoid cells (b and inset) (H&E staining). Immunohistochemistry of the liver metastasis showed intensive expression of predominantly membranous C-KIT (c) and distinct membranous CD34 (d) staining. The lymph node metastases revealed closely packed hypercellular tumor nodules (e) with lymphangioinvasion (f) (H&E staining).
Comparison between Carney triad GIST (case 1), pediatric (case 2) and young adult GIST (case 3)
| CT-GIST (case 1) | Pediatric GIST (case 2) | Young adult GIST (case 3) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15 | 13 | 23 | |
| female | female | female | |
| stomach, greater | stomach, lesser | stomach, corpus | |
| multinodular | multinodular | multinodular | |
| liver | liver | liver | |
| biphasic (spindled and | biphasic (spindled and | liver metastasis: | |
| C-KIT/CD34 + | C-KIT/CD34 + | C-KIT/CD34 + | |
| WT for common C-KIT | WT for common C-KIT | WT for common C-KIT | |
| paraaortal | ? | ? | |
CT = Carney triad, GIST = gastrointestinal stromal tumor, WT = wild type, ? = not to date