Hepatocellular carcinoma arising in a huge hepatocellular adenoma with bone marrow metaplasia

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Abstract

Hepatocellular adenoma (HCA) is the most common type of benign liver tumor, and its major complication is malignant transformation to hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Here, we report a case of HCC arising in HCA with bone marrow metaplasia in a 24-year-old Korean woman who presented with abdominal discomfort. A huge liver mass was found on abdominal ultrasonography. She underwent surgical hepatic resection, and the resected specimen was entirely involved by a 20-cm-sized tumor. Histological review revealed a well differentiated HCC arising from inflammatory HCA with β-catenin nuclear positivity and bone marrow metaplasia that contained hematopoietic cells. This case was unique because malignant transformation, inflammatory type HCA, β-catenin nuclear staining, and bone marrow metaplasia were simultaneously observed. Additionally, it should be noted that a large HCA with β-catenin activation can undergo malignant transformation and should be surgically resected in a timely manner.

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Kang, H. J., Jeong, H. J., Kim, S. W., Yu, E., Lee, Y. J., Kim, S. Y., & Kim, J. (2018). Hepatocellular carcinoma arising in a huge hepatocellular adenoma with bone marrow metaplasia. Journal of Pathology and Translational Medicine, 52(4), 226–231. https://doi.org/10.4132/jptm.2017.11.12

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