Surgical Case Reports (Dec 2018)

Giant gastrointestinal stromal tumor of the mediastinum associated with an esophageal hiatal hernia and chest discomfort: a case report

  • Ryosuke Fujisawa,
  • Yuji Akiyama,
  • Takeshi Iwaya,
  • Fumitaka Endo,
  • Haruka Nikai,
  • Shigeaki Baba,
  • Takehiro Chiba,
  • Toshimoto Kimura,
  • Takeshi Takahara,
  • Koki Otsuka,
  • Hiroyuki Nitta,
  • Masaru Mizuno,
  • Keisuke Koeda,
  • Akira Sasaki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40792-018-0553-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) grow relatively slowly and without specific symptoms; therefore, they are typically incidental findings. We report a rare gastric GIST in the mediastinum associated with chest discomfort and an esophageal hiatal hernia. Case presentation An 81-year-old woman with chest discomfort was admitted to the hospital, where barium esophagography showed a sliding esophageal hiatal hernia and a tumor of the lower esophagus and gastric wall. Esophagogastroscopy confirmed the presence of a huge submucosal tumor that extended from the lower esophagus to the gastric fundus. According to computed tomography, the mediastinal mass measured 12.7 cm and had heterogeneous low-density areas. A submucosal gastric tumor, which we suspected to be a GIST, was diagnosed in association with an esophageal hiatal hernia. Using thoracolaparotomy, we performed a total gastrectomy, a lower esophagectomy, and a Roux-en-Y reconstruction with the jejunum. The presumptive diagnosis was confirmed through immunohistochemical examination; immunostaining yielded results positive for CD34 and c-kit. The patient was discharged from the hospital 13 days after surgery with no complications and remained disease-free at follow-up 24 months after surgery. Conclusions GIST should be considered in the differential diagnosis of tumors growing in the mediastinum.

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