Clinical and Molecular Hepatology (Jun 2012)

Concurrent hepatic adenomatoid tumor and hepatic hemangioma: a case report

  • Ji-Beom Kim,
  • Eunsil Yu,
  • Ju-Hyun Shim,
  • Gi-Won Song,
  • Gwang Un Kim,
  • Young-Joo Jin,
  • Ho-Seop Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3350/cmh.2012.18.2.229
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 2
pp. 229 – 234

Abstract

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A 45-year-old male with alleged asymptomatic hepatic hemangioma of 4 years duration had right upper-quadrant pain and was referred to a tertiary hospital. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging scans revealed a hypervascular mass of about 7 cm containing intratumoral multilobulated cysts. A preoperative liver biopsy was performed, but this failed to provide a definitive diagnosis. The patient underwent a partial hepatectomy of segments IV and VIII. The histologic findings revealed multifocal proliferation of flattened or cuboidal epithelioid cells and a highly vascular edematous stroma. Immunohistochemistry findings demonstrated that the epithelioid tumor cells were positive for cytokeratin (AE1/AE3), vimentin, calretinin, and cytokeratin 5/6, and were focally positive for CD10, and negative for WT1 and CD34, all of which support their mesothelial origin. Immunohistochemistry for a mesothelial marker should be performed for determining the presence of an adenomatoid tumor when benign epithelioid cells are seen.

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