| Literature DB >> 22824559 |
Takeshi Nishi1, Yasunari Kawabata, Youko Hari, Hiroshi Imaoka, Noriyoshi Ishikawa, Seiji Yano, Riruke Maruyama, Yoshitsugu Tajima.
Abstract
Patients with neurofibromatosis-1 (NF-1) sometime develop neuroendocrine tumors (NET). Although these NETs usually occur in the duodenum or peri-ampullary region, they occasionally grow in the pancreas (PNET). A 62-year-old man with NF-1 had mild liver dysfunction and was admitted to our hospital for further examination. An abdominal contrast-enhanced computed tomography scan demonstrated a 30-mm tumor in the head of the pancreas. The scan showed an invasion of the tumor into the duodenum, and biopsy under an endoscopic ultrasonography indicated that the tumor was a NET. A subtotal stomach-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy was performed. Macroscopically, the pancreatic tumor was white and elastic hard. Microscopically, tumor cells were composed of ribbons, cords, and solid nests with an acinus-like structure. The tumor was diagnosed as NET G2 according to the WHO classification (2010). The product of the NF-1 gene, i.e., neurofibromin, was weakly positive in the tumor cells, suggesting that the tumor was induced by a mutation in the NF-1 gene. This is the seventh case of PNET arising in NF-1 patients worldwide.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22824559 PMCID: PMC3545965 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-10-153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Figure 1A view of the back of the patient. Numerous café-au-lait macules and cutaneous neurofibromas can be seen.
Figure 2Findings of an abdominal contrast-enhanced computed tomography scan. The scan demonstrates a 30-mm tumor in the head of the pancreas (arrow), with slow enhancement.
Figure 3Macroscopic findings of the pancreatic tumor. (a) The tumor showed an invasion into the duodenal mucosa (arrow). (b) A white and elastic hard tumor, 30 × 35 × 40 mm in size, was located in the head of the pancreas with direct invasion into the duodenum (arrowheads).
Figure 4Microscopic findings of the pancreatic tumor. (a) Tumor cells were composed of ribbons, cords, and solid nests with acinus-like structure (hematoxylin and eosin, magnification 200×). (b) Hyperplasia of islet cells (positive for chromogranin A staining) was frequently found in the non-neoplastic pancreas (chromogranin A staining, magnification 140×). (c,d,e) Expression of chromogranin A, synaptophysin, and CD56 was strongly positive in the tumor cells (c: chromogranin A staining, magnification 400×; d: synaptophysin staining, magnification 400×; e: CD56 staining, magnification 400×). (f/g) Some of tumor cells, particularly in the acinus-like structure, were positive for α1-antichymotrypsin and α1-antitrypsin (f: α1-antichymotrypsin staining, magnification 400×/g: α1-antitrypsin staining, magnification 400×). (h) Expression of neurofibromin was negative in the tumor cells (neurofibromin staining, magnification 400×). (i) Pancreatic islet cells in the non-neoplastic region demonstrated a strongly positive expression of neurofibromin (arrow). Acinar cells and ductal epithelial cells showed negative expression of neurofibromin (neurofibromin staining, magnification 400×).
List of antibodies for immunohistochemical examination
| Chromogranin A | Rabbit polyclonal antibody |
| Synaptophysin | Mouse monoclonal antibody |
| CD56 | Mouse monoclonal antibody |
| α1-Antichymotrypsin | Rabbit polyclonal antibody |
| α1-Antitrypsin | Rabbit polyclonal antibody |
| Neurofibromin | Mouse monoclonal antibody |
| Ki-67 | Mouse monoclonal antibody |
| c-kit | Rabbit polyclonal antibody |
| CD34 | Mouse monoclonal antibody |
Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors in patients with neurofibromatosis-1
| Coskey and Tranquanda
[ | 1964 | Female | 66 | Body and tail | Insulinoma | Yes |
| Saurenmann et al.
[ | 1987 | Male | 62 | Head | Somatostatinoma | No |
| Fung and Lam
[ | 1995 | Male | 45 | Body and tail | Insulinoma | No |
| Thannberger et al.
[ | 2001 | Male | 28 | Head | Somatostatinoma | Yes |
| Fujisawa et al.
[ | 2002 | Female | 66 | Head | Neuroendocrine carcinoma | Yes |
| Perren et al.
[ | 2006 | ND | ND | Body | Insulinoma | Yes |
| Nishi et al. (present case) | Male | 62 | Head | Neuroendocrine tumor, NET G2 | Yes |
*These cases were reported before 2010, so it is difficult to apply the new WHO classification (2010). Although our case is NET G2, NET G2 was well-differentiated adenocarcinoma in the previous WHO classification (2000). We listed our tumor as malignant according to the previous diagnosis to check with other cases.