Pancreatic carcinoma carries a poor prognosis, especially invasive ductal carcinoma of the pancreas. This retrospective study describes the results of the treatment and prognosis for double cancers in which cancer of the pancreas was associated with malignancies in other organs in 12 patients who were diagnosed and treated at Kurume University Hospital. The patients included 4 women and 8 men, with an average age of 67 years. Of the 12 tumors, 7 were metachronous pancreatic cancers which occurred after resections of other organ malignancies. Five patients had synchronous double cancers, one of whom was diagnosed to have gastric cancer on admission. Two other patients of this group were diagnosed to have lung cancer, while the remaining 2 patients suffered from colon cancer. By the time pancreatic cancer was diagnosed, gastrectomies had been performed in 7 patients for either gastric cancer or ulcers. In addition, one patient underwent a hysterectomy for uterine carcinoma and another received a low anterior resection for rectal carcinoma. Four of 5 patients in the synchronous group had nonresectable tumors and a palliative bypass operation was performed in 2 of these patients. Six patients who had metachronous double cancers died because of pancreatic cancer recurrence or metastases. We conclude that the prognosis of double cancers, where cancer of the pancreas is associated with other organ malignancies, primarily depends on the prognosis of the pancreatic carcinoma, and the present study suggests the necessity of long-term follow-up examinations for gastrectomy patients in order to make an early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer.
Serous cystadenocarcinoma of the pancreas is a rare entity. We report a primary tumor of the pancreas in a 56-year-old woman that was histologically indistinguishable from microcystic adenoma, but which behaved in a malignant fashion. Metastatic lesions were found in the liver at the time of the initial operation. Nine years after the initial operation, new metastatic liver nodules were found, and the histologic characteristics of these lesions were quite similar to those of the pancreatic neoplasm. This is a very rare case which may support the existence of the entity, serous cystadenocarcinoma of the pancreas.
A pancreatic carcinoma, associated with elevated serum alpha-fetoprotein level, was resected from a 67-year-old man. The tumor was strongly suggested to be an acinar cell carcinoma of the pancreas, based on the histological findings of the resected specimen. The tumor measured 12 x 10 x 9 cm, and the cut surface was soft, whitish-yellow, focally necrotic, and hemorrhagic. Under a light microscope, the tumor cells were not arranged in a tubular and trabecular pattern, but rather, showed a tendency toward an acinar structure. Immunohistochemically, alpha 1-antitrypsin- and alpha 1-antichymotrypsin-positive reactions were diffusely positive in most of the tumor cells, while staining for chromogranin, neuron-specific enolase, Grimelius, glucagon, insulin, and alpha-fetoprotein was negative in the tumor cells. We report a large acinar cell carcinoma (associated with elevated serum alpha-fetoprotein level), which had been misdiagnosed as hepatocellular carcinoma preoperatively.
We recently examined the clinicopathological and immunohistochemical features of four cases of primary hepatic carcinoma with sarcomatoid elements. Three of the four patients had associated ordinary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and one had a sarcomatoid carcinoma with no apparent elements of HCC. The presenting symptoms were high fever and hypochondralgia in three patients, and right hypochondralgia without a high fever in one. The preoperative diagnoses were liver abscess in two patients, HCC in one, and cholangioma in one. Preoperative imaging showed necrotic change or abscess formation in the tumors. The sarcomatous elements showed a positive reaction to vimentin in three patients, but the ordinary HCC cells did not. Macroscopically, the tumors appeared as a single nodule with pericapsular growth. The prognoses of these patients were poor due to the early development of intrahepatic or distal metastases. We conclude that symptoms such as a high fever or hypochondralgia are characteristics of these tumors and that they may be histogenetically derived from a dedifferentiation of HCC, although no elements of HCC were found in one of our cases.
A 67-year-old woman was referred with an abnormal finding on an abdominal echogram but presented with no symptoms; a pancreatic tail tumor was detected by ultrasonography. Biochemical examinations showed slight elevation of serum carcinoembryonic antigen level. The lesion was resected by tail and body pancreatectomy and her postoperative course was uneventful. Seven years and 4 months after the initial operation, however, her serum level of carbohydrate antigen 19-9 was found to be elevated, and a recurrence of pancreatic cancer was suspected. Examinations revealed a mass in the head of the remnant pancreas. The lesion was radically resected by total remnant pancreatectomy. Histological examinations showed that the initial tumor was a well differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma, while the second tumor was characterized as a moderately differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma. The surgical margins of the distal pancreatectomy specimen were free of atypical cells. Therefore, the position of the second lesion diminished the likelihood that it had developed by intrapancreatic metastasis. This suggests that the second carcinoma in the head of the pancreas may have been a second primary lesion.
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