| Literature DB >> 27803830 |
Daniel Fernando Gallego1, Carlos Muñoz2, Carlos Andrés Jimenez3, Edwin Carrascal4.
Abstract
Hepatoid adenocarcinoma of the urachus is a rare condition. We present the case of a 51-year-old female who developed abdominal pain and hematuria. Pelvic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reported an urachal mass with invasion to the bladder that was resected by partial cystectomy. On light microscopy the tumor resembled liver architecture, with polygonal atypical cells in nest formation and trabecular structures. Immunochemistry was positive for alfa-fetoprotein (AFP) and serum AFP was elevated. Hepatoid adenocarcinomas have been reported in multiple organs, being most commonly found in the stomach and the ovaries. Bladder compromise has been rarely described in the literature, and it has been associated with poor prognosis, low remission rates, and early metastasis.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27803830 PMCID: PMC5075609 DOI: 10.1155/2016/1871807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Pathol ISSN: 2090-679X
Figure 1Abdominopelvic Magnetic Resonance Image (MRI) showing a 12 × 11 × 10 cm mass with necrotic center and heterogeneous signal on T2-weighted sequence. Coronal (a), axial (b), and sagittal (c) MRI images revealed the mass located at the umbilicus extending to the bladder dome, which is highly suggestive of urachal cancer.
Figure 2Hepatoid adenocarcinoma of the urachus. (a) Trabecular pattern (H&E ×100). (b) Close-up view of hepatoid cells showing pleomorphism, prominent nucleoli, and (c) intracytoplasmic hyaline globules (b and c, H&E ×400). (d) Positive immunostain for Pan-Keratin (AE1/AE3) and (e) intracytoplasmic positive cells for alfa-fetoprotein (AFP).
Demographic and clinical data of reported cases.
| Case number/reference | Age/sex | Symptoms | Tumor size | Serum AFP | Therapy | Stage | Follow-up | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Sinard et al. [ | 68/F | Hydronephrosis | 2.5 | N/A | TUR | T3a | 17 months | AWD |
| (2) Yamada et al. [ | 89/F | Hematuria | 6.5 × 5.5 | + | TC | T2b | 1 month | Unknown |
| (3) Burgués et al. [ | 71/M | Hematuria | N/A | WNL | TUR | T2 | N/A | AWD |
| (4) Lopez-Beltran et al. [ | 66/M | Hematuria | 6.5 | + | TC | T3a | 14 months | Metastasis, DOD |
| (5) Lopez-Beltran et al. [ | 85/M | Hematuria | 80 g | N/A | TUR | T2 | 12 months | Metastasis, DOD |
| (6) Lopez-Beltran et al. [ | 61/M | Hematuria | 5 × 5 | + | TC | T3a | 19 months | Metastasis, DOD |
| (7) Lopez-Beltran et al. [ | 68/M | Hematuria | 1.5 | + | TUR | T1 | 26 months | NED |
| (8) Kawamura et al. [ | 79/M | Hematuria | 1 | + | TUR | Ta | 19 months | NED |
| (9) Sekino et al. [ | 49/F | No symptoms | 0.6 | N/A | TUR | T1 | 20 months | NED |
| (10) Present case | 51/F | Hematuria | 11 × 9 | + | PC | T3a | 4 months | AWD |
AFP: alfa-fetoprotein, AWD: alive with disease, DOD: died of disease, N/A: not available, NED: no evidence of disease, PC: partial cystectomy, TC: total cystectomy, TUR: transurethral resection, and WNL: within normal limits.