The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology (Feb 2024)

Primary Hepatic Choriocarcinoma with Pregnancy: A Diagnostic and Therapeutic Challenge

  • Amith Kumar Pakkala,
  • Phani Kumar Nekarakanti,
  • Bheerappa Nagari,
  • Ashish Kumar Bansal,
  • Gourang Shroff,
  • Megha S Uppin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4166/kjg.2022.116
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 81, no. 2
pp. 91 – 94

Abstract

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Choriocarcinoma occurs mainly in the gonads, but an extragonadal origin has been reported, albeit infrequently. Primary hepatic choriocarcinoma (PHC) is a rare malignancy, with only 11 cases reported. Most cases reported were in males, with none reported in pregnant females. A 23-year-old primigravida presented with a large liver lesion involving the right lobe of the liver at 28 weeks of pregnancy. Preoperative imaging was suggestive of hepatocellular carcinoma. She underwent a non-anatomical resection of the liver lesion. Surprisingly, her postoperative histopathology revealed a diagnosis of PHC. Her blood workup showed elevated beta human chorionic gonadotrophin. She underwent a termination of her pregnancy at 32 weeks. Before initiating adjuvant chemotherapy four weeks after surgery, a whole-body PET scan revealed multiple bi-lobar liver and pelvic deposits. After a multidisciplinary team discussion, she was started on adjuvant chemotherapy. She is currently under regular follow-up, seven months post-surgery. PHC, one of the vascular lesions of the liver, poses a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge, warranting a multidisciplinary approach.

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