| Literature DB >> 27586263 |
Kohei Yamashita1, Yoshifumi Baba1, Junji Kurashige1, Masaaki Iwatsuki1, Katsunori Imai1, Daisuke Hashimoto1, Yasuo Sakamoto1, Akira Chikamoto1, Naoya Yoshida1, Toru Beppu1, Hideo Baba2.
Abstract
Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are potentially malignant mesenchymal tumors that can give rise to distant metastases, mainly in the liver. The co-occurrence of synchronous primary liver tumors (e.g., hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)) in patients with GIST is extremely rare. This report describes a 77-year-old male patient with liver metastasis of GIST originating in the small intestine and synchronous HCC. The patient had undergone resection of the small intestine for the primary GIST 3 years earlier and partial hepatectomy and radiofrequency ablation for liver metastases of GIST 1 year earlier. Despite the continuation of adjuvant therapy with imatinib, two new lesions in the liver were detected by follow-up computed tomography scanning, which showed the gradual enlargement of one tumor. A second hepatectomy was performed. Pathological examination revealed that one tumor was a liver metastasis of GIST and the other was a primary HCC. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the synchronous co-occurrence of a liver metastasis of GIST and a primary HCC.Entities:
Keywords: GIST; HCC; Liver metastasis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27586263 PMCID: PMC5009055 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-016-0212-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Fig. 1CT appearance of two liver tumors, in segments 4 and 8
Fig. 2a Gd-EOB-DTPA-enhanced MRI appearance of two liver tumors, in segments 4 and 8. b PET-CT appearance of two liver tumors, in segments 4 and 8
Fig. 3a Resected specimen containing the two liver tumors. b GIST with immunoexpression of KIT, hepatocellular carcinoma (H&E)