| Literature DB >> 25687847 |
Hyun Jin Oh1, Eun Hye Park1, Yeong Bok Lee1, Jooyeun Hu1, Guk Jin Lee1, Sang Hoon Chun1, Mi Yeong Lee1, Dae Woo Lee2, Jeana Kim3, Jong-Youl Jin1.
Abstract
A 56-year-old female was referred to our hospital due to a mass measuring 5 cm in size in the left pelvic cavity, which was found incidentally during a health examination by ultrasonography. Exploratory laparotomy was performed and the mass was located at the left retroperitoneal parametrium without invasion of the uterus and ovary. The pathology report confirmed squamous cell carcinoma. Even after further studies, we did not find any other primary lesion. Human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA chip test (HPV 9G DNA Membrane Kit, Biometrixtechnology Inc.) showed that the surgical specimen was positive for HPV 18. She received adjuvant chemotherapy and would receive radiation therapy for the possibility of occult gynecologic cancer. Retroperitoneal squamous cell carcinoma of unknown primary is extremely rare and little is known about it. It is reported that HPV may be associated with the disease. Hence, the result of HPV test could have an impact on finding a suspicious primary lesion and treatment modality in this case.Entities:
Keywords: Human papillomavirus; Retroperitoneal neoplasms; Squamous cell carcinoma
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25687847 PMCID: PMC4614228 DOI: 10.4143/crt.2014.111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 1598-2998 Impact factor: 4.679
Fig. 1.(A) Transvaginal ultrasound demonstrated a left pelvic mass with complex echogenicity of 5.18 cm×3.68 cm. (B) T2 weighted pelvic magnetic resonance imaging showed a solid and cystic, heterogeneous enhanced mass measuring 5.5 cm in size in the left pelvic cavity.
Fig. 2.(A) Microscopic examination shows a well capsulated retroperitoneal mass (H&E staining, ×40). (B) Microscopic examination shows poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma (H&E staining, ×400). (C) Immunohistochemical staining of p63 shows strong nuclear positivity (×200).