| Literature DB >> 36211605 |
Hiromi Edo1, Eiko Hyoue1, Kohei Hamamoto1, Masaki Tsuda1, Fumio Morimura1, Kousuke Okano1, Michiko Okazaki1, Kazuki Kawamura2, Keiichi Ito2, Kimiya Sato3, Naoki Edo1, Hiroshi Shinmoto1.
Abstract
Composite pheochromocytoma is an extremely rare tumor that comprises a pheochromocytoma and an embryologically related neurogenic tumor, such as ganglioneuroma, ganglioneuroblastoma, neuroblastoma, or peripheral nerve sheath tumor. A 46-year-old male with hypertension, elevated plasma catecholamine levels, and suspected pheochromocytoma presented to the National Defense Medical College Hospital. CT and MRI showed two adjacent masses in the left adrenal gland; one was a 6 cm cephalic lesion and the other was a 1.5 cm caudal lesion. Only the 1.5 cm caudal mass showed uptake on 123I-metaiodobenzylguanisine single photon emission CT/CT. Pheochromocytoma was suspected and a left adrenalectomy was performed. Pathology confirmed that the 6 cm mass was a ganglioneuroma and the 1.5 cm mass a pheochromocytoma, with cellular intermingling at their border. The two masses were diagnosed as a composite pheochromocytoma-ganglioneuroma. This is the first report in which the two components of a composite pheochromocytoma can be clearly distinguished in the pre-operative images. If a patient with clinically suspected pheochromocytoma has different components from a typical pheochromocytoma, composite pheochromocytoma should be considered.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36211605 PMCID: PMC9518729 DOI: 10.1259/bjrcr.20220079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BJR Case Rep ISSN: 2055-7159
Figure 1.Plain computed tomography (CT) images. (a-, b) CT demonstrates the 6 cm cephalic lesion (white arrow) and the 1.5 cm caudal lesion (yellow arrow) in the left adrenal gland.
Figure 2.MRI. (a–c) MRI of the cephalic mass in the left adrenal gland (white arrows). Coronal (a) and axial (b) fat-suppressed, T2 weighted images show the cephalic lesion with a mixture of high and low signal intensities and curvilinear bands of low intensity. (c) Diffusion-weighted image shows slightly high signal intensity. (d–f) MRI of the caudal nodule of the left adrenal gland (yellow arrows). Coronal (d) and axial (e) fat-suppressed, T2 weighted images show the caudal nodule with heterogeneous, high signal intensity. (f) Diffusion-weighted image shows high signal intensity.
Figure 3.123I-metaiodobenzylguanisine (MIBG) single photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (a) There is no obvious uptake in the cephalic mass in the left adrenal gland (white arrow). (b) MIBG uptake is found in the caudal nodule of the left adrenal gland (yellow arrow).
Figure 4.Macroscopic and microscopic images. (a) In the gross image, the cephalic mass of the left adrenal gland is seen as a translucent white solid tumor. This is a component of the ganglioneuroma (white arrow). (b) In the gross image, the caudal nodule of the left adrenal gland is seen as a reddish-tan solid tumor (a yellow arrow). This is a component of the pheochromocytoma. (c) Microscopic examination shows the pheochromocytoma (black asterisk) infiltrating the ganglioneuroma (white asterisk) in bundles and patches at the boundary between the two tumor components, indicating a composite feature (black arrowheads).