Cases reported "Carcinoma, Hepatocellular"

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1/38. Primary liver carcinoma complicating membranous obstruction of the inferior vena cava.

    A rare autopsy case of primary liver carcinoma complicating a pre-existing, incomplete membranous obstruction of the inferior vena cava (MOVC) is reported. The patient, a 67-year-old Japanese male, was admitted to hospital following a 2 year illness of a left chest wall tumor and a 3 month illness with progressive abdominal pain. Computed tomography scans of the abdomen displayed space-occupying lesions in the third and seventh hepatic segments, respectively. One month later, the patient developed edema of the lower extremities and marked venous dilatation of the abdominal trunk. At that time, Doppler examination revealed the presence of intrahepatic large venovenous collaterals. The patient subsequently succumbed 82 days after hospitalization. At subsequent autopsy, the inferior vena cava was completely obstructed by tumor thrombus, which was formed caudally and cranially to a thin membrane and mimicked the valve, with calcification and elastic lamina, at the phrenic portion. Intrahepatic large collateral pathways were found between submembranous and supramembranous hepatic veins. Anomalous absence of the ostia of the middle hepatic vein was found. In addition, the portal venous trunk was occluded by tumor thrombus. histology of hepatic tumors revealed a combined hepatocellular and cholangiocellular carcinoma in the non-cirrhotic liver with severe acute centrilobular congestion. In MOVC patients such as the case presented, malignancy-induced thrombosis was deemed to be an important factor in prognosis.
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2/38. Double cancer - hepatocellular carcinoma and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma with a spindle-cell variant.

    Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) with a spindle-cell variant is very rare. We report here a surgical patient who had double cancer - hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and ICC with a spindle-cell variant. In this 70-year-old man, who had a history of hepatic resection for HCC about 2 years previously, two large discrete masses were identified in the right lobe of the liver. A right lobectomy of the liver was performed. Pathological findings revealed that one tumor was a typical HCC, and the other was ICC with sarcomatous lesions. Immunohistochemical examinations of the sarcomatous lesions in ICC demonstrated that some of the spindle cells were positive for keratin, epithelial membrane antigen, and vimentin, but negative for S-100 protein, desmin, and actin. From these findings, we concluded that the sarcomatous lesions of ICC were not a true sarcoma, but sarcomatous transformation of cholangiocarcinoma cells, that is, a spindle-cell variant of ICC.
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3/38. Hepatoid variant of yolk sac tumor of the testis.

    A case of testicular yolk sac tumor (endodermal sinus tumor) consisting predominantly of hepatoid cells is documented. A mass measuring approximately 4 x 3 cm was noted in the left testis of a 64-year-old man. Preoperative examination revealed an elevated serum level of alpha-fetoprotein (5479 ng/mL). Histologically, the lesion was composed predominantly of sheet-like or trabecular proliferation of hepatocyte-like cells with eosinophilic or clear cytoplasm. The tumor cells were immunoreactive for alpha-fetoprotein, antimitochondrial antibody, cytokeratin (AE1/AE3), alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, albumin, carcinoembryonic antigen and epithelial membrane antigen. It was necessary to distinguish this variant lesion from metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma, embryonal carcinoma and hepatoid carcinoma.
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4/38. Hepatic arterial injection chemotherapy for hepatocellular carcinoma with epirubicin aqueous solution as numerous vesicles in iodinated poppy-seed oil microdroplets: clinical application of water-in-oil-in-water emulsion prepared using a membrane emulsification technique.

    Iodinated poppy-seed oil (IPSO) accumulates selectively in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) when injected into the hepatic artery. This virtue has been applied to the hepatic arterial injection chemotherapy for the disease. We invented a new water-in-oil-in-water emulsion (W/O/W), in which IPSO microdroplets, 70 micrometer in diameter, were suspended in physiological saline enclosing numerous vesicles of an aqueous solution of epirubicin with remarkable stability. After hepatic arterial injection, the microdroplets accumulated only in HCC tissue and remained in the tissue for more than 3 weeks affecting tumor cells. Efficacy of the W/O/W has been fully proved clinically; the 6-year cumulative survival rate for 24 patients bearing HCC nodules recurrent after hepatectomy, including even 12 patients with four or more nodules, though prognosis of these patients is recognized very poor, was 24%.
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5/38. Intraoperative microwave coagulation therapy for large hepatic tumors.

    We report new surgical techniques for intraoperative microwave coagulation therapy (IMCT), conducted in three patients with large liver neoplasms with poor liver function or difficult tumor location. Anterolateral thoracotomy was performed for tumors in the right lobe to obtain a good operative field. Four electrode needles were inserted for microwave irradiation, with settings of 60 W, 45 s for coagulation and 1 s for dissociation. Clamping of the hepatoduodenal ligament was performed during IMCT. We began the coagulation at the bottom of the tumor, irradiating the tumor and the surrounding parenchyma to create regional necrosis with a safe margin. With these methods, we treated two women diagnosed with large hepatocellular carcinoma with liver cirrhosis and a man with liver metastasis from rectal cancer. The postoperative course of these patients was uneventful. A marked low-density area was seen in the region of therapy and no enhanced findings were observed on enhanced computed tomography postoperatively. However, in one patient, transcatheter embolization (TAE) was performed 1 month postoperatively because recurrence was noted on the bottom of the tumor. Thus, IMCT destroys the peripheral part of the tumor that may remain viable after TAE, but combination therapy with TAE is preferable, especially when a viable part exists within tumors. IMCT is an active, safe, and nontoxic therapeutic modality for large hepatic tumors, and is particularly applicable in patients with large hepatocellular carcinomas and poor liver function.
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6/38. A hepatocellular carcinoma with lymph node metastasis and invasion into the gallbladder: preoperative difficulty ruling out a gallbladder carcinoma.

    We present a case of resected hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) which invaded the gallbladder with a metastasis to a lymph node. It was extremely difficult to make a differential diagnosis between HCC and gallbladder cancer preoperatively. A 68-year old man was admitted to hospital with complaint of a fever. ultrasonography (US) and CT scan showed a mass, growing invasively from the gallbladder bed of the liver (S4) to the lumen of the gallbladder. A selective arteriography showed the mass stained by the cholecystic artery, internal branch of the left hepatic artery, and frontal branch of the right hepatic artery. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) showed the non-visualized gallbladder, a constriction of the common hepatic duct with suspicion of metastatic lymph nodes in the hepatoduodenal ligament. The tumor markers were: alpha-fet-protein 13175 ng/ml, PIVKA-II 26200 mAU/ml and CA19-9 0.0 U/ml. Both HBs antigen and HCV antibody were negative. We performed cholecystectomy with en-block resection of the anterior and middle inferior segment of the liver, the common bile duct and a part of the transverse colon, with dissection of the lymph nodes. The tumor, 8 cm in diameter, was brown colored without a capsule, growing diffusely in the liver, to the inside of the gallbladder and the transverse colon. Histopathological inspection of the specimen revealed moderately differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma with a metastatic lymph node along the common hepatic artery. TNM classification was IVB phase [T3,N0,M1 (LYM,OTH)]. There are only 3 previous cases of HCC reported with invasion into the gallbladder. At most 2.2% of the resected cases of HCC had metastatic lymph nodes at resection, while it was as high as 20-50% of the autopsy cases. Operation on such an invasive HCC case should consider lymph node metastasis.
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7/38. Sister Joseph's nodule in hepatocellular carcinoma.

    We describe three black South African patients in whom hepatocellular carcinoma metastasized to the umbilicus. Sister Joseph's nodule has previously been reported in only two patients with this tumour. A number of routes for this spread are possible: malignant hepatocytes in the portal venous system may reach the umbilicus via a patent umbilical vein; the tumour may propagate directly along the ligamentum teres hepatis to the umbilicus; contiguous spread of the tumour to the umbilicus from anterior peritoneal tissue, either directly infiltrated by hepatocellular carcinoma or the site of metastatic nodules, may occur; embolization of malignant hepatocytes to the umbilicus might take place by way of its arterial blood supply; or hepatocellular carcinoma might reach the umbilicus as a result of retrograde lymphatic spread from para-aortic lymph nodes or from the anterior abdominal wall, to which the tumour has metastasized.
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8/38. Clear cell variant of fibrolamellar carcinoma of the liver.

    Fibrolamellar carcinoma of the liver is a distinctive variant of hepatocellular carcinoma characterized histologically by trabeculae of oncocytic cells with intervening lamellae of collagen fibers. We describe a case with a prominent component of clear cells, a feature not previously recognized in this tumor type. The patient was a 59-year-old woman incidentally found to have a solitary liver tumor, measuring 5 cm. Pathologic examination revealed a circumscribed, firm, tan tumor with peculiar concentric streaks. Oncocytic cells and clear cells were arranged in trabeculae separated by lamellae of collagen or sinusoids. The clear cells possessed abundant finely reticulated clear cytoplasm, which was highlighted by trichrome stain and immunostaining with antimitochondria antibody. Ultrastructurally, the cytoplasm of the clear cells was packed with empty membrane-bound vesicles that occasionally contained short cristae. The features suggested that the clear cell change resulted from ballooning and rarefactive changes of mitochondria. Clear cell fibrolamellar carcinoma should not be confused with conventional clear cell hepatocellular carcinoma, since the former is associated with a more favorable prognosis.
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9/38. Highly well differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma and benign hepatocellular lesions. Can they be distinguished on fine needle aspiration biopsy?

    OBJECTIVE: To determine whether highly well differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma can be distinguished from benign hepatocellular lesions on fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB). STUDY DESIGN: Ninety-five FNABs from 88 patients with hepatic masses/diffuse conditions were reviewed according to new cytologic criteria established by Takenaka et al. They were classified into well-, moderately and poorly differentiated hepatocellular carcinomas (W-, M- and P-HCC) and benign aspirates and histologically verified. RESULTS: There were 21 W-HCC, 39 M-HCC, 10 P-HCC, 3 problematic and 22 benign aspirates. The most useful criteria for diagnosing highly W-HCC were architectural features on the smears/cell block sections, including hypercellularity; arborescent, cohesive clusters; broad trabeculae; transgressing and peripheral endothelium; and cytologic details of small, monotonous hepatocytes with nuclear crowding, decreased cytoplasm, increased nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio, atypical naked nuclei and tumor giant cells. Well-defined cytoplasmic borders, abundant thick and monotonous cytoplasm, eccentric nuclei, thick nuclear membranes, irregular nuclear contours, increased chromatin density, irregular chromatin distribution and macronucleoli were not always detectable in highly W-HCC. In fact, some of them were seen in dysplastic hepatocytes. Deficient reticulin patterns and diffuse sinusoidal CD34 reactivity were helpful. CONCLUSION: Experience, attention to architectural and cytologic details in smears/cell blocks and clinicopathologic correlation should reduce the number of indeterminate reports. However, there will always remain some cytohistologically challenging cases.
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10/38. Metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma of the breast, simulating gynecomastia: diagnosis by fine-needle aspiration biopsy.

    Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) may uncommonly present with distant metastasis in the absence of a documented neoplasm in the liver. The authors herein describe the case of a 60-year-old man with cirrhosis who developed unilateral enlargement of the breast and a subareolar mass. This problem was clinically thought to represent gynecomastia, but a mammary fine-needle aspiration biopsy demonstrated a malignant epithelial neoplasm composed of large granular amphophilic cells. Bile pigment was visualized in the tumor on aspirate smears and cell block preparations; immunostains showed reactivity for cytokeratin and alpha-fetoprotein, but there was no positivity for epithelial membrane antigen, gross cystic disease fluid protein-15, vimentin, estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, or S100 protein. These results indicated a diagnosis of metastatic HCC, which was subsequently confirmed by computed tomography of the abdomen.
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