| Literature DB >> 23946806 |
Betül Unal1, Gülsüm Özlem Elpek, Tekinalp Gelen, Alihan Gürkan, Bülent Yildirim.
Abstract
We report a case with features of gastric adenocarcinoma colliding with a typical carcinoid component. A 51-year-old female was admitted to the Department of Internal Medicine with complaints of epigastric pain. On physical examination of the patient there was significant epigastric tenderness and the CA19-9 level was higher than the normal titer value. An upper gastrointestinal endoscopy showed an ulcerated polypoid mass located on the cardiac region of the stomach. Pathological and immunohistochemical findings diagnosed as a collision tumor comprising both adenocarcinoma and carcinoid tumor. Metastasis of adenocarcinoma was found in 7 perigastric lymph nodes, while metastasis of the carcinoid was not detected. The admixture of neoplastic endocrine and nonendocrine cells, have been found infrequently in gastric tumors. The mixed tumors can be further classified into composite tumors that show an admixture of two histological components with histological transitions and collision tumors where the two components are not intermixed In general it is not easy to morphologically distinguish a collision tumor, from composite tumor. Microscopically, hematoxylin and eosin-stained tissue sections from two different areas of the mass revealed two different types of tumor; an intestinal type adenocarcinoma and a carcinoid tumor. We report a case with features of adenocarcinoma colliding with a typical carcinoid component, along with a review of the literature.Entities:
Keywords: carcinoid; collision tumor; gastric adenocarcinoma
Year: 2013 PMID: 23946806 PMCID: PMC3742811 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2013.1313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1.Macroscopic findings of the resected specimen. The two lesions were detected macroscopically; a large ulcerated polypoid mass (arrow) and a yellow lesion (asterisk) which was observed underneath the normal location of the gastric mucosa (arrowhead).
Figure 2.Histopathological findings of the collision tumor (hematoxylin and eosin staining). (A) Large polypoid tumor revealed moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma (arrow) and another tumor composed of small cells (asterisk). The two tumors were colliding in the gastric cardia and were clearly separated. Magnification, ×100. (B) Larger view of the adenocarcinoma forming gland-like structures (arrow in A). Magnification, ×200. (C) Larger view of the carcinoid tumor composed of a uniform population of small cells with solid patterns (asterisk in A). Magnification, ×200.
Figure 3.Immunohistochemical findings (avidin biotin peroxidase method counterstained with hematoxylin). (A) Tumor cells which formed the carcinoid component did not stain for CEA. (B–D) Cells markedly expressed NSE, chromogranin A and synaptophysin, respectively. The normal gastric mucosa is indicated by an asterisk. (E and F) Tumor cells of the adenocarcinoma stained for CEA, but not for (G) chromogranin A and (H) synaptophysin. Neuroendocrine cells of gastric glands stained for (G) chromogranin A and (H) synaptophysin. Arrows indicate tumor areas. (A–H) Magnification, ×400.
Summary of previous studies on gastric collision tumor composed of an adenocarcinoma and a carcinoid tumor.
| Authors (Ref.) | Age (years) | Gender | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yamashina M | 50 | Male | Corpus |
| Chodankar CM | 69 | Female | Corpus |
| Morishita Y | 49 | Male | Corpus |
| Corsi A | 72 | Male | Unknown |
| Camuñas Mohinelo FA | 66 | Male | Cardia |
| Olinici CD | 68 | Male | Corpus |
| Morishita Y | 84 | Female | Cardia |
| Jayaraman A | 48 | Male | Antrum |
| Doggui MH | 55 | Male | Fundus |
| Mróz A | 56 | Male | Corpus |
| Present case | 51 | Female | Cardia |