Cases reported "Bile Duct Neoplasms"

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1/43. Hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy of cisplatin for biliary cystadenocarcinoma.

    Biliary cystadenocarcinoma is a rare tumor which has a better prognosis after complete surgical removal. However, since there is no other effective therapeutic option instead of surgery, the prognosis is very poor if surgical resection is impossible. We report the case of a 78 year-old woman who was treated only by hepatic arterial infusion (HAI) chemotherapy of cisplatin (85 mg) because liver functional reserve was too bad to perform a major hepatectomy. Huge biliary cystadenocarcinoma occupying the right lobe of the liver measuring 12 cm in size before chemotherapy was drastically decreased to 2 cm in size 8 months after chemotherapy. Although she had abdominal pain and anorexia before chemotherapy, she is doing well and has no complaints 9 months after chemotherapy. In conclusion, an effective therapy may be possible using hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy of cisplatin in patients with biliary cystadenocarcinoma for whom surgical treatment is not suitable.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cystadenocarcinoma
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2/43. Biliary cystadenocarcinoma: sonographic and cytologic findings.

    Biliary cystadenocarcinoma is a rare hepatic cystic tumor. We report sonographic, CT, and MRI findings in an unusual case in an 87-year-old man. The diagnosis was aided by sonographically guided needle aspiration of the lesion, which revealed elevated levels of carcinoembryonic antigen and CA 19-9 in the cystic fluid.
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ranking = 0.71428571428571
keywords = cystadenocarcinoma
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3/43. Mucobilia in association with a biliary cystadenocarcinoma of the caudate duct: a rare cause of malignant biliary obstruction.

    Mucobilia is a rare condition characterized by the accumulation of abundant mucus within the intra- or extrahepatic biliary tree. A variety of hepatobiliary and pancreatic neoplasms are mucin producing and have been associated with the development of mucobilia including biliary mucinosis, biliary papillomatosis, mucin-producing cholangiocarcinoma (MPCC), or cystic neoplasms of the pancreas or biliary tree (cystadenoma or cystadenocarcinoma). We report the case of 46 year-old male with a biliary cystadenocarcinoma of the caudate lobe which resulted in chronic biliary obstruction and relapsing cholangitis. A review of the literature for both mucobilia and biliary cystadenocarcinoma is provided along with a discussion addressing the clinical presentation, diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis for this rare entity.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cystadenocarcinoma
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4/43. A resected case of combined hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma associated with cystic formation.

    Combined hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma is a rare tumor. In addition, both hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma are rarely associated with cystic lesions. We herein present a 62-year-old Japanese woman with combined hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma which was associated with a rapidly enlarging cystic lesion. Both abdominal ultrasonography and computed tomography revealed a cyst with a solid portion in the left hepatic lobe. A partial hepatectomy was performed on the basis of a tentative diagnosis of a cystadenocarcinoma of the liver, while the diagnosis based on immunohistochemical studies was combined hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma with cystic formation. The patient died of tumor recurrence, such as intrahepatic metastases and extensive lymph node metastases, 6 months after the operation. The prognosis of this entity, which has never been reported in the English medical literature and is difficult to preoperatively differentiate from hepatic cystadenocarcinoma, therefore seems to be extremely poor.
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ranking = 0.28571428571429
keywords = cystadenocarcinoma
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5/43. Biliary cystadenocarcinoma with two types of tumour cells.

    We report a rare case of biliary cystadenocarcinoma that occurred in the left hepatic lobe of a 62-year-old man and measured 20 cm in its greatest dimension. The neoplastic epithelium consisted of two types of cells: (1) cells with clear cytoplasm containing abundant mucin, and (2) cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm, which in some areas formed nodules with hepatocytoid features (polygonal cell shape, large nuclei with prominent nucleoli, and pseudoglandular structures). Histochemical stains revealed the presence of cytoplasmic mucin in the hepatocytoid areas, whereas immunohistochemical stains clearly showed a biliary phenotype (diffuse positive staining for "biliary type" cytokeratins, rare foci of positive staining with antibody to human hepatocytes (HEP-PAR1), absence of staining for alpha-fetoprotein, and no evidence of canalicular pattern of staining with polyclonal antibody to carcinoembryonic antigen). These findings indicate that areas reminiscent of hepatocellular carcinoma may occur in biliary cystadenocarcinomas. Histochemical and immunohistochemical stains are useful in reaching a definitive diagnosis in such cases.
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ranking = 0.85714285714286
keywords = cystadenocarcinoma
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6/43. Clinical features and imaging diagnosis of biliary cystadenocarcinoma of the liver.

    Biliary cystadenocarcinoma of the liver is a relatively rare disease. Herein, we reported a case of biliary cystadenocarcinoma with a review of the literature. A 71-year-old female was admitted with the chief complaint of epigastralgia. The imaging studies revealed a biliary cystadenocarcinoma in the left hepatic lobe with suspicion of direct invasion to the left and middle hepatic veins and inferior vena cava. However, there was no direct invasion of the tumor to these veins in operation findings, and an extended left hepatic resection was performed without resection of inferior vena cava. The tumor was histologically diagnosed as biliary cystadenocarcinoma of the liver. diagnosis of biliary cystadenocarcinoma is usually difficult preoperatively, however, a diagnosis was possible with the use of imaging studies. It was suggested that this tumor originated from a benign cystadenoma because of the existence of a transitional zone between normal cells and atypical cells in the cystic wall. Systematic hepatectomy was recommended as the initial treatment in consideration of the features of cystadenocarcinoma.
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ranking = 1.4285714285714
keywords = cystadenocarcinoma
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7/43. Biliary cystadenocarcinoma with superficial spread to the extrahepatic bile duct.

    We report a case of biliary cystadenocarcinoma of the liver with superficial spread to the extrahepatic bile duct. Preoperative endoscopic retrograde cholangiography revealed communication between a 4.5-cm cyst in segment 4 of the liver and the bile duct. From the findings obtained by peroral cholangioscopy and intraoperative cholangioscopy, the granular mucosa in the bile duct was diagnosed as superficially spreading cancer. The right posterior segmental bile duct and the right anterior segmental bile duct were resected at the point where the spread of cancer was no longer traceable and left lobectomy plus caudate lobectomy was carried out. This achieved radical resection, leaving the resected margin of the bile duct free from cancer. Histopathologically, well-differentiated papillary adenocarcinoma was found on the inner surface of the cyst, and the cancer had superficially spread from the cyst to the extrahepatic bile duct via the 2.5-mm diameter communication between the cyst and bile duct. The cancer was limited only to the mucosal layer all over the lesion. When performing radical surgery for biliary cystadenocarcinoma, it is recommended that cholangioscopy be performed to examine whether the cancer has superficial spread to the extrahepatic bile duct or not. bile duct resection should be carried out, depending on the extent of the superficial spread, so that the resected margin of the bile duct is free from cancer.
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ranking = 0.85714285714286
keywords = cystadenocarcinoma
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8/43. Hepatobiliary cystadenoma combined with multiple liver cysts: report of a case.

    Hepatobiliary cystadenomas are rare benign tumors with malignant potential. They are almost always solitary lesions accompanied by multilocular cysts in the liver, and are difficult to differentiate from cystadenocarcinoma, despite the diagnostic modalities available. This report describes a case of hepatobiliary cystadenoma with multiple cysts in the left hepatic lobe, diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging in a 48-year-old woman. Abdominal computed tomography revealed only multiple cystic lesions in the left lobe, but cholangiography via a nasogastric biliary drainage tube combined with percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography showed a stenotic region with fine irregularity in the left lateral posterior segmental bile duct and left lateral anterior segmental bile duct. Hepatobiliary cystadenocarcinoma with multiple liver cysts was suspected. We performed left hepatectomy, and microscopic examination confirmed a diagnosis of hepatic cystadenoma with multiple liver cysts. There was no nuclear atypia or mitosis in the epithelium of the locus, which was constructed of simple columnar-to-cuboidal epithelium with basal nuclei. The patient is well without recurrence more than 4 years after surgery.
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ranking = 0.28571428571429
keywords = cystadenocarcinoma
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9/43. Oncocytic biliary cystadenocarcinoma is a form of intraductal oncocytic papillary neoplasm of the liver.

    Biliary cystadenocarcinoma with oncocytic differentiation was first reported in 1992. This is a report of a second case. The patient (a 71-year-old man) was admitted to our hospital complaining of abdominal fullness. Multicystic lesions were identified in the left hepatic lobe radiologically. The patient died of peritoneal dissemination of carcinoma 20 months later. At autopsy, the tumor of the left hepatic lobe was found to be composed of adjoining multiple cystic lesions and a solid lesion with infiltration of the hepatic hilus and peritoneal dissemination. Histologically, the multicystic lesions were covered by papillary neoplastic epithelial cells with an eosinophilic granular cytoplasm resembling that of oncocytes and a fine fibrovascular core. The cyst wall was fibrous, but there was no mesenchymal stroma. In the solid lesion and infiltrated areas, acidophilic and granular carcinoma cells formed small glandular or solid cord patterns with much mucin secretion (mucinous carcinoma). Immunohistochemically, carcinoma cells of both components were found to contain many mitochondria and showed the phenotypes of hepatocytes and cholangiocytes. Interestingly, the intrahepatic biliary tree also was invaded by carcinoma cells. This may be a case of intraductal oncocytic papillary neoplasm of the left hepatic lobe followed by secondary cystic dilatation of the affected bile duct.
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ranking = 0.71428571428571
keywords = cystadenocarcinoma
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10/43. Biliary cystadenocarcinoma followed up as benign cystadenoma for 10 years.

    We describe a case of biliary cystadenocarcinoma that showed a longterm clinical course. A 69-year-old Japanese man was admitted to our hospital because of abdominal discomfort. The patient had been diagnosed with benign cystadenoma of the liver at another hospital in 1987 and had been followed up for 10 years. Abdominal ultrasonography (US) and computed tomography (CT) scan demonstrated a unilocular cystic lesion, which included multiple conspicuous papillary protrusions in the left hepatic lobe. Left lateral segmentectomy was performed, and intraoperative cholangiography revealed a communication between the cystic tumor and intrahepatic bile duct. The tumor contained clear mucinous fluid and enfolded multiple yellowish papillary projections on the cystic wall. Histological examination showed the tumor to be biliary cystadenocarcinoma. The patient is doing well 4 years after the operation.
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ranking = 0.85714285714286
keywords = cystadenocarcinoma
(Clic here for more details about this article)
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