Case Reports in Gastroenterology (Mar 2021)

Unusual Tissue – Unusual Issue: Pancreatic Heterotopia Presenting as Gastric Outlet Obstruction

  • Thu L. Nguyen,
  • Shivani Kapur,
  • Stephen C. Schlack-Haerer,
  • Grzegorz T. Gurda,
  • Milan E. Folkers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000512427
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 338 – 343

Abstract

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Pancreatic heterotopia (PH) is a common, but typically small (<1 cm), incidental and asymptomatic finding; however, PH should be considered even for large and symptomatic upper gastrointestinal masses. A 27-year-old white woman presented with a 3-week history of burning epigastric pain, nausea, early satiety, and constipation. Physical examination revealed epigastric and right upper quadrant tenderness with normal laboratory workup, but imaging revealed a 5-cm, partly cystic mass arising from the gastric antrum with resulting pyloric stenosis and partial gastric outlet obstruction. Endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration revealed PH – an anomalous pancreatic tissue lying in a nonphysiological site. The patient ultimately underwent a resection and recovered uneventfully, with a complete pathologic examination revealing normal exocrine pancreatic tissue (PH type 2) without malignant transformation. We report a case of heterotopic pancreas manifesting as severe gastric outlet obstruction, in addition to a thorough diagnostic workup and surgical follow-up, in a young adult. Differential diagnoses and features that speak to benignity of a large, symptomatic mass lesion (PH in particular) are discussed.

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