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DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1291653
Biliary intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm visualized intralesionally through a fistula with the duodenal bulb
Publikationsverlauf
Publikationsdatum:
06. März 2012 (online)
A 53-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with abdominal pain. He had undergone surgery for a pancreatic pseudocyst related to chronic alcoholic pancreatitis 7 years previously at another hospital. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) 3 years later had shown a cystic lesion, 4 cm in diameter, at the hepatic hilum, with two small mural nodules. The patient was then lost to follow-up for 3 years.
Following admission to our hospital, MRI showed a 6 × 6.5-cm, inhomogeneous solid lesion between the liver, pancreas, and duodenum, with compression of the duodenal bulb ([ Fig. 1 a ]) and invasion of the left biliary duct, common hepatic duct ([ Fig. 1 b ]), hepatic artery, and portal vein. Gastroscopy showed the presence of a compression on the anterior wall of the duodenal bulb. The compression had two fistulous orifices with villous tissue at the edges, which were exuding whitish mucus ([ Fig. 2 a ]). A diagnostic gastroscope was inserted through one of the fistulous orifices revealing that the internal structure of the neoplastic lesion that was forming a fistula to the duodenal bulb was a multiloculated cavity covered with a whitish, villous tissue ( [Fig. 2 b – d]; [ Video 1 ]). A biopsy of the villous tissue at the edge of the fistula revealed fragments of epithelial neoplasia with papillary structures and focal adenocarcinomatous transformation ([ Fig. 3 a ]).
Qualität:
The patient underwent surgery, and a neoplastic lesion that was infiltrating the biliary tract and the vascular structure at the hepatic hilum, as well as fistulizing to the duodenal bulb, was seen. The pancreas was normal. The surgeon decided to perform a gastrodigiunal anastomosis. Histology of the surgical sample showed an adenocarcinoma, consistent with a biliary intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN-B), the papillary structures of which were fistulizing to the duodenal bulb ([ Fig. 3 b ]).
IPMN-B is a type of bile duct tumor with certain unique features, which include intraductal papillary growth and mucin production. Recent studies have revealed pathological similarities between the IPMN-B and pancreatic IPMN (IPMN-P), and some even consider the two neoplasms to be counterparts [1] [2]. There are several reports of IPMN-P fistulizing to surrounding organs [3] [4] [5]; however, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of an IPMN-B forming a fistula with the duodenal bulb. This occurrence appears to confirm a similarity in behavior between IPMN-B and IPMN-P.
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_CCL_1AB_2AZ_3AB
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References
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- 2 Zen Y, Fujii T, Itatsu K et al. Biliary papillary tumors share pathological features with intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm of the pancreas. Hepatology 2006; 44: 1333-1343
- 3 Jasset F, Delvaux M, Dumitriu D et al. Benign intraductal papillary-mucinous neoplasm of the pancreas with spontaneous associated pancreaticogastric and pancreaticoduodenal fistula. Digestion 2010; 82: 42-46
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- 5 Barresi L, Tarantino I, Curcio G et al. Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) aspect of duodenal bulb invasion by multifocal malignant pancreatic intraductal papillary neoplasm (IPMN). Endoscopy 2011; 43 (Suppl. 2): E270-E271