BackgroundNeuroendocrine carcinoma (NEC) of gallbladder is a rare tumor. The clinical manifestation, treatment, and prognosis of gallbladder NEC are rarely reported.Case presentationEight gallbladder NEC patients were admitted into our hospital. The major complaint was right upper quadrant pain. Two patients underwent a radical resection of gallbladder and liver quadrate lobe. One of them underwent chemotherapies and had no recurrence of NEC during a 25-month followed-up period. The other patient did not undergo chemotherapies, and the NEC recurred in the patient 15 months afterwards. Two patients underwent a radical resection of gallbladder. One of them underwent chemotherapies and had an NEC recurrence 12 months afterwards. The other patient did not undergo chemotherapies and died due to the NEC recurrence 5 months after surgery. Three patients underwent a laparoscopic cholecystectomy and pathologic result showed gallbladder NEC. They did not undergo further treatment and no NEC recurrence was found. One patient underwent tumor biopsy and died due to obstructive jaundice 3 months afterwards. Pathologic results showed that all cases had positive chromogranin A and synaptophysin staining.ConclusionsGallbladder NEC showed no noticeably specific features, and the diagnosis relied on the pathological and immunohistochemistrical results. For T1N0M0 gallbladder NEC, cholecystectomy might be enough. For patients in a late stage, the management of combined therapies might be optimal.
Biliary neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) represent <1% of all NENs. The aim of this retrospective study is to present the clinical characteristics, management and prognosis profiles of 28 biliary NEN patients from a large tertiary center, and identify factors related to prognosis. Nine tumors originated from the gallbladder, two from the extrahepatic bile duct and 17 from the ampulla of Vater. One patient was classified as neuroendocrine tumor (NET) Grade 1, three patients were classified as NET Grade 2, 18 were graded neuroendocrine carcinoma (NEC) Grade 3 and six were classified as mixed adenoneuroendocrine carcinoma (MANEC). The overall survival rate and disease-free survival rate did not have statistically significant differences between tumors of different locations or different grading. Recurrence of disease correlated with poor prognosis (p < 0.001). Lymphovascular invasion and invasion beyond the submucosa were related to higher risk of local lymph node metastases. Multivariate analysis identified patient age (p = 0.021) and R0 resection margin (p = 0.027) as independent prognostic factors associated with overall survival. Our study included relatively large numbers of biliary tract NENs with intact follow-up information. Patients with biliary neuroendocrine tumors showed different clinical outcomes according to tumor locations and tumor grades. Achieving R0 resection is important for better prognosis.
Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography is a good method with diagnostic and therapeutic purposes. Total or partial cholecystectomy is generally adequate for MS Type I. For MS Type II-IV, paritial cholecystectomy, choledochoplasty, or if impossible, Roux-en-Y hepatico-jejunostomy may be performed. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy may be successful in selected preoperatively diagnosed MS Type I patients, and open cholecystectomy is the standard therapeutic method.
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