| Literature DB >> 26943405 |
Hideki Izumi1, Daisuke Furukawa2, Naoki Yazawa3, Yoshihito Masuoka4, Misuzu Yamada5, Kosuke Tobita6, Yohei Kawashima7, Masami Ogawa8, Yoshiaki Kawaguchi9, Kenichi Hirabayashi10, Toshio Nakagohri11.
Abstract
In this case report, we describe the extremely rare case of a collision tumor comprising cancers of the bile duct and the pancreas. A 70-year-old man was referred to our hospital with a diagnosis of obstructive jaundice. He was diagnosed with pancreatic head cancer, and we performed a pancreaticoduodenectomy with lymph node dissection. At laparotomy, there were two palpable masses in the vicinity of the confluence of the cystic duct and the head of the pancreas. The resected specimen demonstrated tumors at the confluence of the cystic duct and in the pancreatic head. Histopathological examination demonstrated a moderately differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma in the pancreatic head and a well-differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma at the confluence of the cystic duct. Immunostaining was negative for p53 and MUC6 in the pancreatic head tumor; however, immunostaining was positive for both in the tumor located at the confluence of the cystic duct. The two tumors were histologically different and were diagnosed as collision cancer caused by the collision of the bile duct and pancreatic cancers.Entities:
Keywords: Bile duct cancer; Collision tumor; Pancreatic cancer
Year: 2015 PMID: 26943405 PMCID: PMC4747933 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-015-0041-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Laboratory data on admission
|
| |
|---|---|
| WBC | 8.4 × 103/μL |
| RBC | 4.56 × 106/μL |
| Hb | 14.0 g/dL |
| Ht | 41.5% |
| PLT | 18.9 × 104/μL |
| BUN | 13 mg/dL |
| Cr | 0.7 mg/dL |
| Na | 139 mEq/L |
| K | 4.5 mEq/L |
| Cl | 101 mEq/L |
| Ca | 9.7 mg/dL |
| CRP | 2.22 mg/dL |
| ALB | 3.7 g/dL |
| CK | 40 IU/L |
| AST | 179 IU/L |
| ALT | 244 IU/L |
| ALP | 2,097 IU/L |
| γ-GTP | 1,246 IU/L |
| T-Bil | 2.5 mg/dL |
| D-Bil | 1.5 mg/dL |
| AMY | 29 IU/L |
| CEA | 13.0 ng/mL |
| CA19-9 | 515.3 U/mL |
Figure 1The tumor boundary within the pancreatic head is unclear in the non-uniform contrast equilibrium phase-arterial phase.
Figure 2Cholangiographic examination shows severe stenosis of the lower bile duct.
Figure 3The resected specimen demonstrated tumors in both the bile duct and the pancreatic head. Stenosis due to bile duct invasion by pancreatic head cancer was noted in both the pancreatic and the bile ducts (black arrow). Stenosis was also noted in the middle bile duct, suggesting bile duct cancer (white arrow). The yellow arrows were the stump of the bile duct.
Figure 4The pancreatic head tumor and the tumor at the confluence of the cystic duct. Pathologic examination revealed a well-differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma in the bile duct (a) (H.E., ×40), which was p53-positive (b), and a moderately differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma in the pancreatic duct (c) (H.E., ×40), which was p53-negative (d).
Figure 5Two histologically different tumors observed in the head of the pancreas. Within the pancreatic parenchyma, there is a ductal structure with nuclear atypia (a) (H.E., ×40). Two types of carcinoma collide with each other in the pancreas (b) (immunostaining for p53).
Figure 6The collision between the pancreatic cancer and the bile duct cancer at the resection site. The pancreatic cancer and the bile duct cancer are colliding within the pancreatic head.
Figure 7Pancreatic cancer and bile duct cancer colliding with the pancreatic head. The cholangiocarcinoma and the pancreatic head cancer collided at the X mark.