| Literature DB >> 30943904 |
Ryohei Takahashi1, Kazunobu Shinoda2,3, Takashi Ishida4, Yasuo Hamamoto5, Shinya Morita1, Hirotaka Akita6, Sotaro Kitaoka1, Satoshi Tamaki1, Hiroshi Asanuma1, Tadashi Yoshida7, Masahiro Jinzaki6, Kaori Kameyama8, Mototsugu Oya1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) in transplant recipients are very rare and only a handful of cases have been reported to date. Here we present the first known case of a huge GIST in a kidney transplant recipient with perforation of small intestine. CASEEntities:
Keywords: And imatinib mesylate; Gastrointestinal stromal tumor; Kidney transplant recipient; Spontaneous rupture
Year: 2019 PMID: 30943904 PMCID: PMC6448240 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-019-1310-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Background of reported cases of patients with GIST after organ transplantation
| Case | Author | Year | Transplanted organ | Age/Sex | Primary disease | Time from transplantation to diagnosis (months) | Symptoms/causes at diagnosis | Location | Treatment | Solitary/Multiple |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Agaimy | 2007 | Kidney | 59/F | Diabetic nephropathy | 40 | Non-specific abdominal pain | Stomach | Resection | Solitary |
| 2 | Agaimy | 2007 | Kidney | 58/F | Glomerulonephritis | 96 | Non-specific abdominal pain | Small intestine | Resection | Solitary |
| 3 | Saidi | 2008 | Liver | 54/M | HCV-HCC | 11 | Colonoscopy | Ascending colon | Resection | Solitary |
| 4 | Camargo | 2008 | Liver | 64/M | HBC-LC, HCC | 7 | Anal discomfort | Lower rectum | Resection | Solitary |
| 5 | Tu | 2012 | Kidney | 57/F | Hypertensive renal failure | 6 | Non-specific abdominal pain | Pelvic cavity | Resection | Solitary |
| 6 | Mulder | 2012 | Kidney | 72/M | Not described | 251–262 | Upper gastrointestinal bleeding | Stomach | Resection | Solitary |
| 7 | Mrzljak | 2013 | Liver | 53/M | Alcoholic LC | Not described | Incidentally at the other operation | Jejunum | Resection | Solitary |
| 8 | Cimen | 2015 | Kidney | 46/F | Hypertensive renal failure | 216 | Ultrasound | Stomach | Resection | Solitary |
| 9 | Cheung | 2017 | Kidney | 64/M | Diabetic nephropathy | 24 | Anemia | Stomach | Resection | Solitary |
| 10 | Cheung | 2017 | Kidney | 48/M | FSGS | 12 | Abdominal mass | Multiple mesentery | Imatinib | Multiple |
| 11 | This case | 2018 | Kidney | 64/M | Diabetic nephropathy | 72 | Right colic pain | Ileum | Resection | Solitary |
Treatment and outcome of reported cases of patients with GIST after organ transplantation
| Case | Author | Size (cm) | Nuclear mitotic counts | Fletcher’s criteria | Joensuu’s criteria | Introduction of Imatinib | Immunosuppression before the treatment | Immunosuppression after the treatment | Outcome/Months |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Agaimy | 3.5 | < 5/50 HPF | Low | Low | Not described | Not described | Not described | Alive/68 |
| 2 | Agaimy | 23.0 | 14/50 HPF | High | High | Not described | Not described | Not described | Not described |
| 3 | Saidi | 2.5 | < 5/50 HPF | Low | Low | None | Tac, Azathioprine | Not described | Alive/18 |
| 4 | Camargo | 5.0 | 5/50 HPF | Intermediate | Low | None | Tac | Not described | Alive/20 |
| 5 | Tu | 4.5 | 2–3/50 HPF | Low | Low | None | CsA, MMF, Steroid | Steroid withdrawn | Alive/24 |
| 6 | Mulder | 5.0 | > 10/50 HPF | High | High | 400 mg/day | CsA, Steroid | CsA dosage was reduced from 110 mg daily to 75 mg daily | Recurrence/21 |
| 7 | Mrzljak | 1.0 | 1/50 HPF | Low | Low | None | Tac, MMF | Not described | Death/38 |
| 8 | Cimen | 15.0 | 14/50 HPF | High | High | 400 mg/day | CsA, Azathioprine, Steroid | CsA trough level at 200–350 μg/L | Alive/12 |
| 9 | Cheung | 3.0 | 9/50 HPF | High | Intermediate | None | CsA → Tac | Tac trough level at 2.6 μg/L | Liver metastasis/24 |
| 10 | Cheung | Not described | Not described | Not described | Not described | 400 mg/day | CsA, MMF | CsA withdrawn | Alive/120 |
| 11 | This case | 11.0 | 20/50 HPF | High | High | 400 mg/day | CsA, MMF, Steroid | CsA withdrawn | Alive/18 |
Fig. 1Virtual endoscopic images with multi-planar reconstruction on computed tomography colonography. a Coronal and (b) sagittal planes show the huge tumor originating from the small intestine and not from the colon. The bowel tract (in pink) represents the colorectum. The arrows represent an air bubble in the tumor
Fig. 2Magnetic resonance imaging scans of the gastrointestinal stromal tumor. a The tumor showed moderately high signal intensity on a fat-suppressed T2-weighted image. b The tumor clearly showed high signal intensity on a diffusion-weighted image. c Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted coronal image with fat suppression showed a weak enhancement in the tumor
Fig. 3Emergent computed tomography images on the day of the operation. Arrows represent free air close to the tumor
Fig. 4Pathological images of the gastrointestinal stromal tumor. a Macroscopic finding of the tumor represents that this was a multinodular tumor continuous to the intestinal wall. The arrow represents the perforated hole. b The tumor was located just under the muscularis mucosa, and the boundary was clear. [Hematoxylin-Eosin (HE) × 4]. c The central part of the tumor fell into necrosis and became cystic. d Tumor cells were spindle shaped cells with rodlike hyperchromatic nuclei. The arrows represent the cells during mitosis (HE × 40). The tumor cells were strongly positive for KIT (e), CD34 (f), and DOG1 (g) stainings. h The positive ratio of Ki-67 staining was 20%. The staining for desmin was negative (i) and the staining for S-100 protein was weak (j)