| Literature DB >> 30187147 |
Yuya Nobori1, Takahiro Amano2, Mieko Ochi3, Toshio Kumasaka3, Eiji Sunami2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Peutz-Jeghers syndrome (PJS) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by hamartomatous polyposis of the gastrointestinal tract. It is associated with a high risk of malignancy in the gastrointestinal tract, as well as in other organs. We report a case of colon cancer at the anastomotic site that occurred 18 years after high anterior resection of the rectum for intussusception caused by Peutz-Jeghers polyposis. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Anastomotic site; Heterotopic ossification; Peutz-Jeghers syndrome; Rectal cancer
Year: 2018 PMID: 30187147 PMCID: PMC6125262 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-018-0519-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Fig. 1Peutz-Jeghers polyposis of the colon resected at the age of 12. a Macroscopic photograph showing the resected colon with a giant papillary polyp filling the lumen and some smaller polyps. b Microscopically, the polyps were multilobulated with branching bands of the muscularis mucosae covered by hyperplastic glandular mucosa (× 1; inset: × 10, hematoxylin-eosin stain)
Fig. 2Endoscope images of the rectum at a the first examination and b at the second examination conducted 4 days later
Fig. 3Macroscopic and microscopic photographs of the resected rectum. a The surface of the resected rectum shows mucosal defect (white arrow) and a submucosal tumor on the anastomotic line. b The cut surfaces of the rectum demonstrate a submucosal tumor with bone lesion underneath the mucosal defect (white arrowheads). c Histologically, the tumor with bone lesion (*) occupies the muscle layer and submucosal area (whole-mount image; hematoxylin-eosin [HE] stain). d Part of the surface of the tumor is covered by granulation tissue, indicating erosion (× 20; HE stain). e Image showing adenocarcinoma invading into the bone lesion (× 5; HE stain). f Normal mucosa in the submucosal fibrosis (black arrow) and the bone lesion in the proper muscle layer (black square) at the anastomotic site (× 2; Elastica van Gieson stain). Inset: a high-power view of the area within the black square (HE stain)
Fig. 4Scheme of rectal cancer developing from the anastomotic site in the present case. a Healing state of anastomotic leakage when the patient was 12 years old. The healing process of abscess formation by anastomotic leakage may lead to heterotopic ossification and repair of rectal mucosa, inducing the incorporation of rectal mucosa into the bone tissue (M, rectal mucosa; PM, proper smooth muscle layer; F, fibrosis of anastomotic site; arrowheads indicate rectal mucosa incorporated into the bone tissue). b Development of cancer at the anastomotic site 18 years later. Cancer may arise from the rectal mucosa in the cavity or the stromal tissue, subsequently invade into adjacent tissues including bone tissue, and protrude into the rectal lumen through the orifice of the cavity