We report an 83-year-old man with pancreatic body cancer of 4.5 cm in diameter. Peripheral leukocyte count was 15,700/microl and the serum concentration of granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) was 123 pg/ml (normal, 6.0-21.9 pg/ml) on admission. Furthermore, not only K-ras codon 12 (GGT --> GAT) but also p53 at codon 247 (CGG --> CCG) mutations were identified in the pancreatic juice aspirated endoscopically. We performed chemotherapy with two courses of 5-fluorouracil, pirarubicin hydrochloride, and mitomycin-C, resulting in no beneficial effect. After the second course the patient developed interstitial pneumonia, probably caused by anticancer drugs, and died 4 months after the tumor was detected. In the autopsy tissue, the tumor macroscopically occupied the pancreas body and was 7 x 6 x 5 cm in size. Histopathologic diagnosis of the tumor was poorly differentiated adenosquamous carcinoma. Immunohistochemical staining of the autopsy tissue showed that pancreatic cancer cells were positive for G-CSF. This is the first case report of G-CSF-positive pancreatic cancer confirmed by immunohistochemistry.
We report a case of mucin-producing biliary papillomatosis in a 78-year-old woman. Abdominal ultrasound (US) and computed tomography (CT) showed wall thickening and dilatation of the intrahepatic bile duct (IHBD), as well as a nodular lesion, 1.2 cm in diameter, in the left branch of the IHBD. Gastric endoscopy revealed excretion of bile-containing mucin on the anterior wall of the body of the stomach. Endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) showed gastrobiliary fistula and discharge of mucin into the stomach. Needle biopsy of the biliary tumor revealed papillary proliferation, but no malignant cells were recognized histologically. Therefore this patient was diagnosed as having mucin-producing biliary papillomatosis forming gastrobiliary fistula. She did not present with obstructive jaundice, probably because of the fistula. She is alive, without obstructive jaundice, 16 months after the diagnosis without having had surgery. This is, to our knowledge, the first reported case of biliary papillomatosis forming gastrobiliary fistula and with the patient free of obstructive jaundice.
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