The Clue Of A Possible Etiology About Spontaneous Regression Of Hepatocellular Carcinoma: A Perspective On Pathology.
Wang, Z., Ke, Z. F., Lu, X. F., Luo, C. J., Liu, Y. D., Lin, Z. W., & Wang, L. T. (2015). The clue of a possible etiology about spontaneous regression of hepatocellular carcinoma: a perspective on pathology. OncoTargets and therapy, 8, 395–400. https://doi.org/10.2147/OTT.S79102
View Original Source →Abstract
Spontaneous regression of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a rare event. However, only a few of the causes of cases of HCC spontaneous regression are clear. More cases are ambiguous. We report on a patient who had a spontaneous regression of HCC as detected by histological and immunohistochemical exam, and compared this case to 20 cases of non-specific HCC. In our case, we found that the odd phenomenon is that CD163(+) macrophages are overactivated in surviving HCC, which is spontaneously regressing. Concomitantly, we cannot find a similar phenomenon in peritumoral liver tissue or non-specific HCC. According to our microscopical morphology and immunohistochemical study, we considered that a clue of a possible etiology about HCC spontaneous regression is that CD163(+) macrophages are overactivated.
Case Details
Disease Location
Liver
Personal Characteristics
50-year-old man there was no previous history of heavy alcohol intake, operations, or blood transfusions.
Clinical Characteristics
3- months history of slight abdominal discomfort, no evidence of recent fever, acute hepatitis, or drugs. HBV positive. Us showed isolated, large, highly reflective lesions suggestive of a tumour in the right lobe of the liver. Plain CT showed a nonuniform low-density area measuring 10.0 cm in diameter s7-s8. Contrast-enhanced CT revealed the tumour to be partly encapsulated, enhanced for the most part, while it also had large low-density areas, suggesting necrosis
Remission Characteristics
No info
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
Overactivation of CD163+ macrophages
Clinical Treatment
Right hepatectomy