| Literature DB >> 24348838 |
Daren Liu1, Dike Shi1, Yuanliang Xu1, Liping Cao1.
Abstract
Perivascular epithelioid cell tumor (PEComa) is a rare tumor that originates from mesenchymal tissues. Cases of PEComa in the liver are extremely rare. The present study aimed to analyze the clinical features of PEComa in the liver and discuss its management. Here we report a 25-year-old female with multiple lesions of low density with poorly defined borders in the liver, as shown by a computed tomography (CT) scan. A partial hepatectomy was proceeded and PEComa was diagnosed by immunohistochemistry. No evidence of recurrence was observed during the one year follow-up. A total of 20 patients with hepatic PEComa, including one case from the present study and 19 cases that were reported in literature between June 2001 and December 2012, were reviewed and analyzed. The mean patient age was 43.4 years (range, 25-67 years) and the cases consisted of 18 female and two male patients. The tumor size ranged between 2.0×1.6 and 15.0×12.0 cm. Of the 20 patients, nine were asymptomatic and 11 had mild to significant complaints. Immunohistochemistry plays a key role in the diagnosis of PEComa. All the cases in this study were strongly positive for human melanoma black-45. A surgical resection is the gold standard for curative intent. All the patients underwent a surgical resection and none were administered perioperative chemotherapy or radiotherapy. In total, 13 of the 14 patients with follow-up information survived during the 8-36-month follow-up period and one patient succumbed due to recurrence two years after the surgery.Entities:
Keywords: human melanoma black-45; liver; neoplasm; perivascular epithelioid cell tumor
Year: 2013 PMID: 24348838 PMCID: PMC3861588 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2013.1689
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1Imaging of hepatic PEComa. (A) Contrast-enhanced phase of CT reveals a poorly-defined mass with a significantly high intensity in segment VII of the liver. (B) The liver mass in segment VII revealed a strong enhancement in the contrast-enhanced phase of the MRI. PEComa, perivascular epithelioid cell tumor; CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 2Immunohistochemical results of hepatic PEComa (x200). (A) Tumor cells showing strong and diffuse positive staining for HMB-45 (+++). (B) Tumor cells showing strong and diffuse positive staining for SMA (+++). PEComa, perivascular epithelioid cell tumor; HMB-45, human melanoma black-45; SMA, smooth muscle actin.
Clinical data of 20 cases.
| First author, year (ref.) | Gender/age, years | Symptom | Size, cm | Location, lobe |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present case | F/25 | None | 2.5×1.0 | Left |
| Qiu | F/67 | Abdominal pain | 15.0×12.0 | Right |
| Deng | M/66 | None | 3.0×3.5 | Left |
| He | F/35 | None | 3.5×3.0 | Right |
| Han | M/44 | None | 2.0×1.6 | Right |
| Li | F/56 | Abdominal distension | 5.0×4.0 | Left |
| Chen and Li, 2009 ( | F/37 | Abdominal pain | 5.0×4.0 | Right |
| Zhang and Wang, 2012 ( | F/55 | None | 3.0×3.0 | Right |
| Chen, 2009 ( | F/36 | Abdominal pain | 7.0×5.0 | Right |
| Chen, 2009 ( | F/45 | Abdominal discomfort | 5.5×4.0 | Right |
| Liu | F/32 | None | 5.5×5.5 | Right |
| Zou | F/54 | Abdominal discomfort | 6.0×5.0 | Right |
| Xu | F/35 | None | 2.0×2.0 | Right |
| Lin | F/30 | Abdominal discomfort | 3.6×3.1 | Right |
| Liu | F/31 | Abdominal pain | 8.0×6.0 | Right |
| Zhu | F/26 | None | 5.0×3.0 | Right |
| Gao | F/59 | Abdominal pain | 6.0×5.0 | Right |
| Wang | F/46 | None | 4.0×4.0 | Right |
| Shi | F/41 | Abdominal discomfort | 5.5×4.0 | Left |
| Shi | F/48 | Abdominal discomfort | 8.0×6.0 | Right |
M, male; F, female.
Results of the immunohistochemistry.
| Immunohistochemistry | Frenquency, % (Positive cases/Total cases) |
|---|---|
| HMB-45 | 100 (20/20) |
| SMA | 88 (14/16) |
| Melan-A | 100 (9/9) |
| Vimentin | 92 (12/13) |
| S-100 | 54 (7/13) |
| Desmin | 40 (2/5) |
| CD34 | 45 (5/11) |
| AFP | 0 (0/10) |
| EMA | 0 (0/9) |
HMB-45, human melanoma black-45; SMA, smooth muscle actin; AFP, α-fetoprotein; EMA, epithelial membrane antigen.