| Literature DB >> 31768882 |
Koichi Hamada1,2, Satoshi Saitoh3, Noriyuki Nishino4, Daizo Fukushima4, Kae Techigawara4, Ryota Koyanagi4, Yoshinori Horikawa4, Yoshiki Shiwa4, Hideo Sakuma5, Fukuo Kondo6.
Abstract
Patients with focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH) develop benign hepatocellular nodules. FNH most frequently occurs in young women. There are no reports of the onset of FNH in elderly men. We report a case of FNH in an elderly man, whose nodules increased in number and size. The patient underwent surgery for carcinoma of the left renal pelvis at 69 years of age; no liver masses were noted on yearly follow-up contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CECT). Ten years later, CECT revealed a hepatic mass, and magnetic resonance imaging suggested FNH. The nodules increased in number and size in subsequent follow-up examinations.Entities:
Keywords: Elderly man; Focal nodular hyperplasia; Older age; Progressive type
Year: 2019 PMID: 31768882 PMCID: PMC7239834 DOI: 10.1007/s12328-019-01072-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1865-7265
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of the progression of FNH. There was no hepatic nodule until he was 78 years of age. FNH appeared in segment 7 at 79 of age. The FNH nodules increased in size and number while the patient was undergoing follow-up
Laboratory data at the time of liver biopsy
| Blood cell count | Blood chemistry | Serology | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White blood cell | 8000 | /mm3 | Total protein | 7.0 | g/dL | C-reactive protein | 0.34 | mg/dL |
| Red blood cell | 463 | × 104/mm3 | Albumin | 3.6 | g/dL | HBsAg | (–) | |
| Hemoglobin | 13.5 | g/dL | Total bilirubin | 0.8 | mg/dL | HCV-Ab | (–) | |
| Hematocrit | 40.6 | % | AST | 20 | U/L | |||
| Platelet count | 18.7 | × 104/mm3 | ALT | 12 | U/L | Tumor markers | ||
| LDH | 192 | U/L | AFP | 2.0 | ng/mL | |||
| Coagulation | ALP | 225 | U/L | DCP | 15 | mAU/mL | ||
| Prothrombin time | 86 | % | GGTP | 41 | U/L | CEA | 3.0 | ng/mL |
| Total cholesterol | 147 | mg/dL | CA19-9 | 7 | U/mL | |||
| Blood urea nitrogen | 28.6 | mg/dL | ||||||
| Creatinine | 1.15 | mg/dL | Fibrosis marker | |||||
| Serum ammonia | 60 | μg/dL | M2BPGi | 0.35 | C.O.I | |||
AFP alpha fetoprotein, ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate aminotransferase, CA19-9 Carbohydrate antigen 19-9, CEA Carcinoembryonic antigen, DCP des-gamma carboxyprothrombin, GGTP gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, HBsAg hepatitis B surface antigen, HCV-Ab hepatitis C antibody, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, M2BPGi Mac‐2 binding protein glycosylation isomer
Fig. 2Contrast-enhanced computed tomography. a Plain CT and CECT at 73 years of age showed no mass lesions in the liver. b CECT at 77 years of age shows no mass lesions in the liver. c A 25-mm nodule with hyperdense and clear borders was noted in segment 7 on CECT at 78 years of age. No nodules were detected on plain CT. d The nodules were hyperdense in the arterial phase on CECT at 89 years of age. e The nodules were hyperdense in the portal phase on CECT at 89 years of age. CECT contrast-enhanced computed tomography
Fig. 3Images of multiple phase dynamic MRI on T1-weighted images for the nodule in segment 7 at 78 years of age. a On T1-weighted images, the lesion was hypointense (arrowhead). b–d The lesion was enhanced on dynamic MRI at 80, 120, and 180 s after contrast injection (arrowhead). MRI magnetic resonance imaging
Fig. 4The changes in the EOB-MRI hepatobiliary phase findings over time. a-1 At 79 years of age: a 25 mm nodule with clear borders was noted in segment 7 region with a hypointense center and a hyperintense surrounding area (arrowhead). a-2 No mass was noted behind the nodule in segment 7. a-3 No mass was noted in segments 7 or 8. b-1 At 87 years of age: the nodule in segment 7 showed no major change (arrowhead). b-2 A 12-mm nodule exhibiting similar findings was noted behind the nodule in segment 7 (arrow). b-3 No mass was noted in segments 7 and 8. c-1 At 89 years of age: the nodule in segment 7 showed no major change (arrowhead) and a 10-mm nodule appeared in segment 4 (arrow). c-2 The nodule behind the nodule in segment 7 increased to 20 mm (arrow). c-3 Nodules of 10 mm in diameter appeared in segments 7 (arrow) and 8 (arrowhead). EOB-MRI gadolinium-ethoxybenzyl-diethylenetriaminpentaacetic acid-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging
Fig. 5Ultrasound examination. a B-mode ultrasound showed a 35-mm mass lesion as a slightly hyperechoic area with unclear borders in segments 6 and 7. b Contrast-enhanced ultrasound showed that the entire lesion was enhanced in the arterial phase. c, d Perfusion images showed that the enhancement pattern of fast centrifugal filling of the lesion was composed of central vessels and radical vascular branches (spoke-wheel appearance). e In the post-vascular phase, there was no defect in the lesion. f The mass became iso-enhanced in the portal phase
Fig. 6The histological and immunohistochemical findings. a Hematoxylin–eosin staining revealed that the background liver was normal (bar = 1 mm). b Hematoxylin–eosin staining revealed that the portal veins and sinusoids were partially. dilated and the infiltration of lymphocytes in the lesion (bar = 200 μm). c Liver-fatty acid-binding protein: positive (bar = 200 μm). d Immunolabelling for glutamine synthetase reveals map-like staining within the lesion (bar = 1 mm). e Immunolabelling for glutamine synthetase reveals map-like staining within the lesion (bar = 200 μm). f β-catenin was not positively stained in the nuclei of the hepatocytes (bar = 200 μm). g Serum amyloid A: negative (bar = 200 μm). h Heat shock protein 70: negative (bar = 200 μm). i Glypican 3: negative (bar = 200 μm). j Staining of C-reactive protein was not significantly positive (bar = 200 μm)