| Literature DB >> 22355498 |
Mohamed A Zayed1, Jon Kosek, Sherry M Wren.
Abstract
A 57-year-old with a 9-year history of increased abdominal girth, presented with increased abdominal pain, anemia, and acute renal failure. His past medical history was only remarkable for a previous lung cancer 21 years ago that was treated with a right upper lung lobectomy. A computed tomography (CT) scan of the patient's abdomen showed a solitary 20×20×25cm cystic splenic mass. The patient underwent an urgent splenectomy. Intra-operatively a large splenic cystic cavity was found with a solid inferior splenic mass. An exhaustive histological analysis of the splenic mass confirmed a clear cell carcinoma with low malignant potential that likely represented a metastatic lesion from the patient's previous distant lung cancer. Postoperatively the patient recovered well and at 1-year followup the patient demonstrated no further evidence of metastatic disease. This case is extremely unique and provides a very rare example of a metastatic solitary clear cell carcinoma to the spleen, with a presumed latency period of more than 20 years.Entities:
Keywords: clear cell carcinoma; metastatic; spleen.
Year: 2011 PMID: 22355498 PMCID: PMC3282448 DOI: 10.4081/rt.2011.e43
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rare Tumors ISSN: 2036-3605
Figure 1Large intra-peritoneal splenic mass. A representative cross-sectional axial CT image demonstrates a large 20 × 20 cm cystic splenic mass in the left upper quadrant of the abdomen. Compared to cystic main body of the splenic mass, the inferio-lateral border appears more solid. There is associated mass effect with lateral displacement of the mesentery and posterior displacement of the left renal complex.
Figure 2Postoperative gross appearance of the extracted splenic mass. A) Well encapsulated splenic mass with associated overlying adventitial and adipose tissue. B) Opened cystic cavity of splenic mass reveals an inner surface with course trabecule with fibrinous exudates. A longitudinal section through the inferior pole splenic mass demonstrates a pale appearing solid mass with surrounding red splenic tissue.
Histological analysis.
| Stain | Purpose | Findings | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| PAS | Glycogen deposits | + | Extensive glycogen in clear cell cytoplasms |
| Trichome | Collagen deposits | + | Collagenous bands infiltrating islands of tumor cells |
| Congo red | Amyloid proteins/deposits | - | No amyloid proteins or deposits |
| Pankeratin | Epithelial phenotype marker | + | Epithelial origin |
| Cytokeratin 7 | Epithelial phenotype marker | + | Epithelial origin |
| S-100 | Neural phenotype marker | - | Non-neurnal origin |
| Synaptophysin | Neural or neuroendocrine phenotype marker | - | Non-neurnal or neuroendocrine origin |
| Chromogranin | Neural or neuroendocrine phenotype marker | - | Non-neurnal or neuroendocrine origin |
| CD43 | Lymphocytic marker | - | No lymphocytic lesions |
| CD3 | Lymphocytic marker | - | No lymphocytic lesions |
| P63 | Squamous differentiation marker | + | Clear cell squamous differentiation |
| CD10 | Renal clear cell carcinoma marker | +/- | Inconclusive |
| PAX2 | Metastatic renal cell carcinoma marker | - | No evidence of renal cell carcinoma |
| HMB-45 | Primary extra-pulmonary sugar cell tumor (PEST) marker | - | No evidence of PEST |
| Smooth muscle actin | PEST marker | - | No evidence of PEST |
| Calretinin | Methosthelioma marker | - | No methosthelioma |
| TTF-1 | Adenocarcinoma marker | - | No adenocarcinoma |
| Ki-67 | Mitotic activity | - | Very low mitotic activity |
Figure 3Histological examination reveals clear cells in splenic mass tissue. A) Low magnification image of hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining of the inferior pole splenic mass. Islets of interspersed clear cells are observed throughout fibrous sheets. B) High magnification image of H&E staining of splenic mass shows groups of cells with larger clear cytoplasms, with surrounding band of fibrous tissue. C) PAS staining avidly stains cytoplasm of clear cells. D) Pankeratin exclusively stains clear cell clusters.