| Literature DB >> 36006072 |
Marco Di Serafino1,2, Roberto Ronza1,2, Divina D'Auria3, Roberto Fiorentino2,4, Dario Arundine2,4, Annalisa De Leone2,5, Salvatore Picascia2,5, Alberto Martino2,5, Enrico Crolla2,6, Severo Campione2,7, Giovanna Guida2,8, Carlo Molino2,6, Ferdinando Riccardi2,4, Luigia Romano1,2.
Abstract
Drug-induced acute pancreatitis (DIP) is a recognised but underreported entity in the literature. Immunotherapy drugs have been described as one possible emerging cause, although the pathogenic mechanism is still largely unclear. To date, only a few cases have been reported, even if in recent times there is an over-increasing awareness of this pathologic entity. The imaging-based diagnosis of DIP can be difficult to establish, representing a real challenge for a radiologist, especially when the inflammatory disease appears as a focal mass suspicious for a malignancy. Case report: We herein report the case of a 71-year-old man with a known history of partially responsive lung adenocarcinoma subtype with high programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression, who underwent positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) imaging follow-up after one year of immunotherapy. The exam revealed a stocky/packed lesion in the pancreatic body, with increased 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) accumulation highly suggestive of pancreatic cancer, which finally was proven to be a DIP induced by immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: FDG PET/CT; IgG4-related sclerosing disease; MRI; auto immune pancreatitis; drug-induced pancreatitis; pancreatic cancer
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36006072 PMCID: PMC9414187 DOI: 10.3390/tomography8040174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tomography ISSN: 2379-1381
Figure 1PET/CT ((a)—unenhanced CT; (b)—positron emission tomography; (c)—fusion imaging) showing a tumefactive alteration of the pancreatic body-tail (white arrows), with increased FDG accumulation (SUV = 4.4).
Figure 2MRI showing focal enlargement of pancreatic body (white arrows) iso-intense on T1w (a) and iso-hyper intense on T2w (b), with homogeneous enhancement after gadolinium-based contrast agent administration (c).
Figure 3MRCP showing focal main pancreatic duct caliber reduction at the level of the lesion with a slight dilatation above (white arrow).
Figure 4MRI showing focal enlargement of pancreatic body with restricted water diffusion on DWI (b value = 800) (white arrow).
Figure 5EUS features of the pancreatic lesion confirming the presence of a nodular area in the pancreas body (a); dominant blue color at elastography is an indicator of high tissue stiffness (b); poor contrast enhancement after i.v. administration of SonoVue (c); FNA with 22 G needle of the nodular area ((d); white arrow).
Figure 6Histopathological specimen ((a–d); hematoxylin eosin; 400× magnification): pancreatic exocrine tissue presented with marked atrophy, residual acini are distorted, and some inflammatory cells are identifiable.
Figure 7MRI follow-up 1 month after previous examination showing reduction in the previously described focal enlargement of pancreatic body (white arrows) isointense on T1w (a) and T2w (b), with homogeneous enhancement after gadolinium-based contrast agent administration (c) and no restricted water diffusion on DWI ((d); b value = 800).
Figure 8PET/CT ((a)—unenhanced CT; (b)—positron emission tomography; (c)—fusion imaging) at 2 months follow-up confirmed radiological resolution as well as absence of pathologic FDG uptake (white arrows).
Figure 9Comparison between magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) findings at the diagnosis (a) and at 1 month follow-up (b); focal main pancreatic duct caliber reduction at the level of the lesion with a slight dilatation above (white arrow) completely regressed at 1 month follow-up MRCP (dotted white arrow).