| Literature DB >> 28709465 |
Natally Horvat1,2,3, Edmund M Godfrey4, Timothy J Sadler4, Jaclyn F Hechtman5, Laura H Tang5, Carlie S Sigel5, Serena Monti6, Lorenzo Mannelli7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cholangitis is an inflammatory process of the biliary tract with a wide range of clinical manifestations and it is not always considered in the differential diagnosis in asymptomatic patients. To the best of our knowledge there is no previous report in the English literature of focal cholangitis manifesting exclusively as liver parenchymal changes mimicking liver metastasis in asymptomatic patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) and history of manipulation of the biliary tree. The purpose of this article is to present six cases of subclinical focal cholangitis mimicking liver metastasis in asymptomatic patients with history of PDAC and biliary tree intervention. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Biliary tract surgical procedures; Cholangitis; Pancreas cancer; Pancreatic ductal carcinoma
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28709465 PMCID: PMC5512934 DOI: 10.1186/s40644-017-0124-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Imaging ISSN: 1470-7330 Impact factor: 3.909
Fig. 1Case 1. a CECT demonstrates an ill-defined hypovascular area in the periphery of segment VII (arrow). Liver biopsy was performed with a diagnosis of inflammatory changes without malignancy. One month after the beginning of antibiotics, (b) CECT shows the resolution of the lesion. (c, d) Liver biopsy demonstrates prominent bile ductular proliferation, active cholangitis and portal oedema, with no malignant neoplasm
Fig. 2Case 2. a CECT shows a hypervascular nodule with target appearance in the periphery of segment VIII (arrow). The patient underwent liver biopsy with a diagnosis of inflammatory changes without malignant cells. b CECT 2 months after antibiotics the lesion was no longer identified. c Liver biopsy demonstrates a dense lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate of hepatic parenchyma with a paucity of bile ductules and no carcinoma is present
Fig. 3Case 3. a CECT demonstrates one hypovascular nodule in the periphery of segment IV (dashed arrow) and a hypovascular ill-defined area in the segments VII and VIII (arrows). Both lesions resolved on follow-up CECT (b)
Fig. 4Case 4. MR images demonstrate an elongated lesion in the periphery of segment VI (arrows) with high SI on T2WI (a), restriction on DWI (b), low SI on T1WI (c), and post-contrast enhancement (d). The lesion resolved on follow-up MRI (e-h)
Fig. 5Case 5. CECT and MRI demonstrate a peripheral hypovascular lesion, surrounded by THAD (a), with high SI on T1WI (b) and T2WI (c), as well as restriction on DWI (d, e). The lesion resolved after 4 months of follow-up (f)
Fig. 6Case 6. CECT shows a peripheral hypovascular nodule with target appearance (arrow), surrounded by THAD (a). The nodule presented high SI on T2WI (b). After 3 months of follow-up the nodule was no longer demonstrated (c, d)
Summary of focal cholangitis cases
| Case | Sex | Age (years) | Symptoms | BTI | Interval between BTI and HL (days) | Laboratory abnormalities | CA 19.9 (U/mL) before / at diagnosis of HL | Imaging features | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F | 57 | None | BDA | 558 | None | 17 / 19 | CT (venous phase): ill-defined hypovascular lesion | Benign on LB and disappearance on FU |
| 2 | F | 71 | None | BDA | 235 | None | 35 / 21 | CT (biphasic): hypervascular nodule with target appearance in arterial and venous phases | Benign on LB and disappearance on FU |
| 3 | F | 74 | None | Papillotomy | 99 | None | 34 / 38 | CT (venous phase): hypovascular nodule (L1) and hypovascular ill-defined area (L2) | Disappearance on FU |
| 4 | M | 69 | None | BDA | 479 | None | 52 / 18 | MRI (triphasic): low SI on T1WI, high SI on T2WI, high SI on DWI, enhancement greater than liver background in all post contrast phases | Disappearance on FU |
| 5 | F | 60 | None | Stent | 123 | CA 19.9a | 63 / 74 | CT (biphasic): hypovascular lesion with peripheral THAD | Disappearance on FU |
| 6 | M | 59 | None | Stent | 165 | CA 19.9b, APc | 2156 / 1032 | CT (biphasic): hypovascular nodule with target appearance in arterial and venous phases and peripheral THAD MRI (triphasic): low SI on T1WI, high SI on T2WI, high SI on DWI, hypovascular in all post contrast phases | Disappearance on FU |
AP alkaline phosphatase, biphasic arterial and venous phases, BTI biliary tree intervention, CA cancer antigen, BDA biliodigestive anastomosis, DWI diffusion weighted imaging, FU follow-up, HL hepatic lesion, LB liver biopsy, L1 lesion 1, L2 lesion 2, SI signal intensity, THAD transient hepatic attenuation differences, triphasic: arterial, venous and delayed phases
aCA 19.9: 74 U/mL (normal range: 0–37 U/mL)
bCA 19.9: 1032 U/mL (normal range: 0–37 U/mL)
cAP: 190 U/L (normal range: 45–129 U/L)