| Literature DB >> 33914269 |
Menghua Zhu1,2, Hongyu Li1, Yanyan Wu1,2, Yang An1,3, Yuye Wang1,2, Chun Ye4, Dan Zhang4, Rui Ma4, Xuehan Wang5, Xiaodong Shao6, Xiaozhong Guo7, Xingshun Qi8.
Abstract
Brunner's gland hamartoma is a benign tumor of the duodenum, but has malignant potential with a very low risk of progression into adenocarcinoma. It is uncommon with a frequency of less than 1.0% among the primary tumors of the small intestine. In addition, its clinical manifestations are nonspecific, etiology remains unclear, and treatment strategy needs to be further refined. This literature review mainly discusses the epidemiology, clinical features, possible etiology and pathogenesis, diagnostic methods, malignant potential, treatment, and prognosis of Brunner's gland hamartoma.Entities:
Keywords: Brunner’s gland; Duodenum; Etiology; Hamartoma; Hyperplasia
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33914269 PMCID: PMC8189944 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-021-01750-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Fig. 1Underlying risk factors of Brunner’s gland hamartoma
Helicobacter pylori (Hp) infection in Brunner's gland proliferating lesions
| First author | Number of patients in total | Hp infection (+) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | Frequency | ||
| Destek (2019) | 18 | 12 | 67.0% |
| Kim (2012) | 25 | 0 | 0 |
| Sakurai (2005) | 129 | 73 | 56.6% |
| Kovacević (2001) | 7 | 5 | 71.0% |
Main clinical features of patients with Brunner's gland hamartoma: an overview of literature
| First author (year) | Sex | Age (years) | Complaint | Location | Shape | Size (cm) | Diagnosis | Treatment | Complication | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walden (1998) | Male | 28 | Melena, exertional dyspnea | Duodenal bulb | Pedunculated polyp | 4.0 × 2.5 × 2.0 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Endoscopic resection | Uneventful | Asymptomatic with 14 months follow-up |
| Rocco (2006) | Female | 58 | Epigastric discomfort | Duodenal bulb | Pedunculated polyp | 3.0 × 4.0 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Endoscopic resection | Uneventful | Asymptomatic with 6 months follow-up |
| Gao (2004) | Male | 32 | Epigastric discomfort, melena | Duodenal bulb | Pedunculated polyp | 3.5 × 3.0 × 2.0 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Surgical resection | Uneventful | Asymptomatic at postoperative period |
| Rana (2019) | Male | 76 | Vomiting, melena | Duodenal descending | Pedunculated polyp with multiple ulcers on surface | 10.0–12.0 × 3.5 × 1.5 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Endoscopic resection | NA | NA |
| Peloso (2017) | Male | 72 | Epigastric pain, vomiting | Duodenal descending-horizontal junction | Broad-based lesion | 4.0 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Polyp excision via duodenotomy | Uneventful | Asymptomatic at postoperative period |
| Akaki (2014) | Male | 26 | Melena, anemia | Gastroduodenal junction | Pedunculated polyp | 6.4 × 3.0 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Distal gastrectomy | Uneventful | Asymptomatic with 1 year follow-up |
| Tan (2002) | Male | 70 | Melena, anemia | Duodenal descending | Pedunculated polyp | 10.0 × 2.0 × 1.5 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Laparotomy via a transduodenal approach | Uneventful | Asymptomatic with 2 years follow-up |
| Martinez (2014) | Male | 60 | Epigastric discomfort, vomiting | Duodenal bulb | Subepithelial mass | 3.0 × 4.0 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Surgical resection | NA | NA |
| Hizawa (2002) | Female | 62 | NA | Duodenal bulb | Broad-based lesion | 0.7 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Endoscopic resection | Uneventful | NA |
| Female | 71 | Broad-based lesion | 1.8 | |||||||
| Male | 63 | Sessile polyp | 1.5 | |||||||
| Male | 65 | Sessile polyp with surface dimples | 1.5 | |||||||
| Male | 34 | Sessile polyp with surface dimples | 2.0 | |||||||
| Female | 36 | Pedunculated polyp | 2.0 | |||||||
| Kostalas (2016) | Female | 52 | Mildly deranged liver-function tests, weight loss | Duodenal bulb and descending | A solid mass | NA | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Pancreatoduodenectomy | NA | NA |
| Petersen (2008) | Female | 56 | Epigastric pain, nausea, vomiting, weight loss, anorexia | Pylorus-duodenal descending | Submucosal long tubular mass | 8.5 × 7.0 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Billroth I procedure | Uneventful | Asymptomatic at postoperative period |
| Gourtsoyiannis (1990) | Male | 74 | Melena, weakness, dizziness | Duodenal descending | Pedunculated polyp | 5.0 × 3.0 × 4.0 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Surgical resection | NA | NA |
| Takeuchi (2015) | Female | 52 | A sticking sensation when eating | Duodenal bulb | Pedunculated polyp | 5.0 × 3.0 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Laparoscopic partial duodenectomy | NA | NA |
| Male | 67 | Epigastric discomfort | 6.0 × 3.5 | Laparoscopic and endoscopic tumor resection | ||||||
| Female | 52 | Asymptomatic | 3.5 × 2.7 | Laparoscopic partial duodenectomy | ||||||
| Kitagawa (2018) | Female | 64 | Anemia | Duodenal bulb | Pedunculated polyp | 7.0 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Endoscopic mucosal resection | NA | NA |
| Jung (2013) | Male | 45 | Melena | Pyloric ring | Pedunculated polyp | 4.8 × 3.2 | Brunner's gland hamartoma | Piecemeal endoscopic mucosal resection | NA | No relapse with 5 months follow-up |
NA not available
Fig. 2Macroscopic specimen (a) and cut surface (b) of Brunner’s gland hamartoma
Fig. 3Macroscopic and microscopic findings of Brunner’s gland hamartoma. Case 1. A 55-year-old male patient presented with abdominal discomfort and underwent endoscopic examination showing a polyp in the duodenal bulb. a Endoscopically resected specimen of about 1.5 × 0.8 × 0.7 cm in size. b Histological examination revealing massive hyperplasia of Brunner’s glands with focal dysplasia (hematoxylin and eosin, × 100). Case 2. A 60-year-old male patient presented with melena and underwent endoscopic examination showing a polyp in the duodenal bulb with bleeding. c Endoscopically resected specimen of about 3.5 × 2.0 × 1.0 cm in size. d Histological examination revealing massive hyperplasia of Brunner’s glands mixed with smooth muscle and infiltrating inflammatory cells (hematoxylin and eosin, × 100)
Different subtypes of duodenal polyposis and sporadic duodenal polyp
| Subtypes | Age of onset (years) | Common duodenal distribution | Endoscopic appearance | Histological characteristics | Immunohistochemical markers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brunner’s gland hamartoma [ | 50–70 | Duodenal bulb and descending | Pedunculated/sessile polyp | Mixture of Brunner’s glands, ducts, smooth muscle, fibrous tissue, adipose tissue, lymphocytes, etc. | MUC6 (+) |
Gastric heterotopia [ | NA | Duodenal bulb and descending | Isolated or multiple submucosal masses | Lesions consisting of gastric glands covered by normal duodenal mucosa | β-catenin (+) |
Inflammatory fibroid polyp [ | 50–80 | NA | Isolated polyp with smooth mucosa | Spindle-shaped cells proliferation with infiltration of small blood vessels and eosinophilic inflammation | Vimentin (+), CD34 (+) |
Lipoma [ | 50–80 | Duodenal descending | Isolated/rarely multiple, pedunculated/sessile, round/oval, and soft mass with normal surface mucosa, which may have areas of erosion or ulceration | Mature adipose tissue arranged in lobules | CD34 (+)a, desmin (−), S100 protein (−), STAT6 (−), SMA (−) |
Leiomyoma [ | 60–80 | NA | Lobular mass with a boundary that is well-defined/irregular/interdigitating with normal smooth muscle | Mature smooth muscle cells with hyaline degeneration, coagulative necrotic stroma, and low mitotic activity | SMA (+), desmin (+), S100 (−), Ki-67 (−), CD34 (−), HMB4 (−) |
Carcinoid [ | No age predilection | Proximal duodenum | Intraluminal polypoid/mural mass | Endocrine secretion granules observed by a characteristic silver affinity | Serotonin (+), gastrin (+), somatostatin (+) |
Gastrointestinal stromal tumor [ | 50–65 | Duodenal descending | Smooth submucosal mass with ulceration and bleeding areas on the surface | Most are spindle cell tumors with palisade nuclei, half are mixed with skeinoid fibers, and more than 20.0% are accompanied by hemangioma-like vascular proliferation | CD117 (+): 95.0% CD34 (+): 70.0% |
Lymphoma [ | 50–60 | Proximal duodenum | Multiple small, rough polyps or nodules | Different histological patterns: diffuse large B cell, mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue, mantle cell, and Hodgkin’s and follicular lymphoma | CD20 (+)b, CD10 (+), Bcl-2 (+), BCL6 (+), low Ki-67 index |
Non-ampullary sporadic adenoma [ | 60–90 | Distal duodenum | Isolated sessile polyp | Mostly tubular crypts with hyperchromatic, enlarged, and pseudostratified nuclei | Cytokeratin 7 (+), cytokeratin 20 (+) |
Familial adenomatous polyposis [ | 20–40 | Duodenal descending and horizontal, peri-ampullary | Multiple flat polyps | Tubular or tubulovillous crypts mixed with columnar epithelial cells, goblet cells, paneth cells, and endocrine cells, accompanied by enlarged and elongated hyperchromatic nuclei | Cytokeratin 7 (+), cytokeratin 20 (+) |
Peutz-Jeghers syndrome [ | 10–30 | NA | Isolated/multiple polypoid lesions | Branched villous structures containing smooth muscle core and multiple types of cells | Serotonin (+) |
Solitary Peutz-Jeghers polyp [ | NA | NA | Isolated, pedunculated/rarely sessile, polypoid lesion | Branched villous structures containing smooth muscle core and multiple types of cells | Serotonin (+) |
NA not available
aThe immunohistochemical marker we describe here is the histologic pattern of spindle cell/pleomorphic lipoma
bThe immunohistochemical marker we describe here is the histologic pattern of follicular lymphoma
| Duodenal Brunner’s gland hamartoma is a rare benign tumor, which accounts for less than 1% of the primary tumors of the small intestine, and usually does not produce clinical symptoms. |
| Its clinical manifestations are nonspecific, etiology remains unclear, and treatment strategy needs to be further refined. |
| Endoscopic biopsies are mostly negative, because the mass is often covered by intact duodenal mucosa, and the depth of biopsy is usually insufficient to reach the tumor tissue located in the submucosa. |
| This lesion has been insufficiently recognized. |
| Brunner’s gland hamartoma often refers to a benign proliferative lesion of the duodenum. |
| Underlying risk factors of Brunner’s gland hamartoma include high gastric acid secretion, |
| Endoscopic ultrasonographic features are as follows: mucosal and submucosal involvement, variable echogenicity (sometimes mixed with hypoechoic), and multiple cystic changes inside the tumor. Endoscopic ultrasonography-guided fine-needle aspiration can improve the diagnostic accuracy of Brunner’s gland hamartoma. |
| With the growth of benign proliferative lesions of Brunner’s glands, mucosal ulcers may develop, thereby leading to the repair of gastric foveolar metaplasia with papillary architecture and then malignant transformation. |
| For asymptomatic patients with Brunner’s gland hamartoma, conservative treatment of small lesions is acceptable, while excision of large lesions is recommended to prevent bleeding and obstruction. For symptomatic patients, endoscopic or surgical resection should be considered. |