| Literature DB >> 26589730 |
Sean L Zheng1, Vincent S Yip2, Federica Pedica3, Andreas Prachalias2, Alberto Quaglia3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mixed adeno-neuroendocrine carcinoma (MANEC) of the biliary tract is rare with only a few reported cases. Consequently, knowledge about their pathogenesis, histopathological characteristics and outcomes is sparce. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26589730 PMCID: PMC4654861 DOI: 10.1186/s13000-015-0439-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Fig. 1Dual phase abdominal contrast CT scan. Tumour at the bifurcation of the right anterior and posterior portal vein (arrow). Enhancement of lesion during arterial phase (a), with mild contrast washout in portal venous phase (b). Liver shows background steatosis
Fig. 2MRCP. Arterial phase demonstrating enhancement of tumour (arrow) (a), with images at 120 s post-contrast demonstrating washout of contrast (arrow) (b), and successive axial images at 10 min post-contrast showing dilatation of interlobular bile ducts (arrowhead) (c, d, e)
Fig. 3Low magnification view of intraductal (a) and periductal invasive component (b). H&E 20×
Fig. 4Intraductal component showing strong and diffuse staining for synaptophysin (a and b) and chromogranin (c and d)
Fig. 5Ki67 analysis estimated to be up to 8 % with up to three mitotic figures present in 50 HPF
Fig. 6High magnification view of part of the lesion showing clarification of the cytoplasm and signet ring morphology. H&E 400×
Fig. 7Alcian blue diastase PAS. Tumour cells with signet ring morphology showing weak cytoplasmic staining. 400×
Fig. 8Numerous tumour cells in the areas showing signet ring morphology stain for MUC-1. 30×
Fig. 9CA19.9 staining highlights the superficial component of the intraductal-growing tumor, most likely residual biliary epithelium
Fig. 10Hep-Par1 staining showing negative hepatocellular tumour differentiation, with normal adjacent liver parenchymal staining (top right)
Comparison of clinical, pathological and histological features of intrahepatic carcinomas
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Cholangiocarcinoma | Biliary neuroendocrine carcinoma | Mixed adeno-neuroendocrine carcinoma | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Common site | Liver parenchyma | Perihilar and extrahepatic, rarely intrahepatic [ | Extrahepatic biliary tract | Very rare, perihilar and extrahepatic bile ducts [ |
| No previous reports of intrahepatic MANEC | ||||
| Laboratory abnormalities | Raised hepatitic enzymes | Intrahepatic—typically raised ALP and GGT, normal or mildly elevated bilirubin | Raised ALP and GGT | As cholangiocarcinoma and BNET |
| Tumour markers—AFP [ | Tumour markers CA19-9 and CEA may be raised, but lack sensitivity and specificity [ | |||
| Radiological features | Hyper-attenuating in arterial phase with portal venous phase washout on dual-phase contrast CT | Hypo or iso-attentuating compared to background liver on dual-phase contrast CT in both venous and arterial phases | Similar radiological findings to cholangiocarcinoma | As cholangiocarcinoma and BNET |
| Increased T2 intensity on MRI | Evidence of biliary tract obstruction with proximal dilatation | |||
| Invasion of portal vein | ||||
| Histological features | Neoplastic cells resembling hepatocytes. It can have different type of architecture such as trabecular, acinar, pseudoglandular, compact and scirrhous | Invasive adenocarcinoma with variable sized tubular structures, formation of acini or micropapillary structures. The intraductal growth in the extrahepatic biliary tree can present as BilIN or IPNB [ | These tumours are composed of cells superimposable to those of gut and pancreas endocrine cell and show diffuse positivity for Chromogranin A and synaptophysin without any other differentiation [ | Adenocarcinoma component typically on tumour surface, with stromal, vascular and local lymph node invasion involving neuroendocrine components [ |
| Positive Hep-Par1 staining [ | Neuroendocrine component usually shows higher proliferative activity [ | |||
| Prognosis | Highly variable dependent on staging, grading, presence or absence of cirrhosis [ | Better outcomes in intrahepatic tumours For R0-resected intrahepatic tumours—median survival 80 months, 5-year survival 63 % [ | Dependent on grade (mitotic index and Ki-67 proliferation index) [ | Dependent on proliferative activity of neuroendocrine component [ |
| Appears to have better long-term survival rate compared with other biliary tract malignancies [ | 45 month survival in one case [ |