| Literature DB >> 28258561 |
Hideki Shibata1,2,3, Nobuyuki Ohike4, Tomoko Norose4, Tomohide Isobe4, Reika Suzuki4, Hideyuki Imai4, Akira Shiokawa4, Masafumi Takimoto5, Akihiro Tabuchi6, Yuichi Takano6, Eiichi Yamamura6, Masatsugu Nagahama6, Nobuyuki Takeyama7, Kazuaki Yokomizo8, Hiroki Mizukami8, Jun-Ichi Tanaka8, Takeshi Aoki9, Masahiko Murakami9.
Abstract
The patient was a 60-year-old man without any particular complaints, but he underwent abdominal computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) due to a fatty liver, which revealed two similar cystic lesions regarded as branch duct-type intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (BD-IPMN) in the pancreatic body [BD-IPMN (b), 16 mm in size] and tail [BD-IPMN (t), 13 mm in size] without a "high-risk stigmata" or "worrisome features". He subsequently received follow-up by MRCP every 6 months. Two years later, MRCP showed prominent dilation of the main pancreatic duct (MPD) and mural nodule formation within the dilated MPD adjacent to the BD-IPMN (b). Distal pancreatectomy specimens revealed that the BD-IPMN (b) was lined by low-papillary gastric mucinous epithelium with low-to-intermediate-grade dysplasia and involved the MPD, forming a malignant mural nodule showing pancreatobiliary-type IPMN. In contrast, the BD-IPMN (t) was lined by flat, monolayer columnar gastric mucinous epithelium without atypia, which suggested the possibility of a "simple mucinous cyst". A genetic analysis showed KRAS mutation only in BD-IPMN (b). Differences in the histological and genetic findings between two similar BD-IPMNs in the present case may suggest what kinds of examinations should be performed in patients with BD-IPMNs without any worrisome features.Entities:
Keywords: Brunch duct-type IPMN; KRAS mutation; Malignant mural nodule; Simple mucinous cyst
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28258561 PMCID: PMC5429895 DOI: 10.1007/s12328-017-0728-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1865-7265
Fig. 1MRCP showed BD-IPMNs in the pancreatic body (indicated by a yellow arrow) and tail (indicated by a red arrow) at the initial visit (a); prominent dilation of the MPD (indicated by red arrowheads) and enlargement of the cystic lesions were observed 2 years later (b)
Fig. 2Enhanced CT (a) showed a mural nodule (indicated by a yellow arrow) within the dilated MPD adjacent to the BD-IPMN in the pancreatic body, corresponding to a low-echoic tumor (mural nodule; indicated by a yellow arrow) within the MPD by EUS (b). The endoscopic biopsy of the mural nodule revealed adenocarcinoma (c)
Fig. 3The resected specimen (c) revealed that the mural nodule in the MPD consisted of PB-type IPMN with high-grade dysplasia (adenocarcinoma) (a) with a diffuse positivity of p53 immunostaining (a insert) and KRAS mutation (G12V). The BD-IPMN of the body was lined by gastric mucinous epithelium showing low papillary configuration with mild epithelial stratification with the same KRAS mutation (d), and the proliferation of similar gastric IPMN components sequentially involved the bottom of the mural nodule and the wall of the surrounding dilated MPD (indicated by red arrowheads) (b). The BD-IPMN of the tail was lined by flat, monolayer gastric mucinous epithelium lacking cellular atypia and KRAS mutation (e)