A searchable database of
medically documented cases

About the Project

Multiple Inflammatory Pseudotumors Of The Liver Demonstrating Spontaneous Regression: A Case Report

Ishii-Kitano, N. 2022Other/Unknown

Ishii-Kitano, N., Enomoto, H., Nishimura, T., Aizawa, N., Shibata, Y., Higashiura, A., Takashima, T., Ikeda, N., Yuri, Y., Fujiwara, A., Yoshihara, K., Yoshioka, R., Kawata, S., Ota, S., Nakano, R., Shiomi, H., Hirota, S., Kumabe, T., Nakashima, O., & Iijima, H. (2022). Multiple Inflammatory Pseudotumors of the Liver Demonstrating Spontaneous Regression: A Case Report. Life (Basel, Switzerland), 12(1), 124. https://doi.org/10.3390/life12010124

View Original Source →

Abstract

Inflammatory pseudotumor (IPT) of the liver is a rare benign disease. IPTs generally develop as solitary nodules, and cases with multiple lesions are uncommon. We herein report a case of multiple IPTs of the liver that spontaneously regressed. A 70-year-old woman with a 10-year history of primary biliary cholangitis and rheumatoid arthritis visited our hospital to receive a periodic medical examination. Abdominal ultrasonography revealed multiple hypoechoic lesions, with a maximum size of 33 mm, in the liver. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography revealed low-attenuation areas in the liver with mild peripheral enhancement at the arterial and portal phases. We first suspected metastatic liver tumors, but fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, magnetic resonance imaging and contrast-enhanced ultrasonography suggested the tumors to be inconsistent with malignant nodules. A percutaneous biopsy showed shedding of liver cells and abundant fibrosis with infiltration of inflammatory cells. Given these findings, we diagnosed the multiple tumors as IPTs. After careful observation for two months, the tumors almost vanished spontaneously. Physicians should avoid a hasty diagnosis of multiple tumors based solely on a few clinical findings, and a careful assessment with various imaging modalities should be conducted.

Case Details

Disease Location

Liver

Personal Characteristics

70-year-old woman. 10-year history of primary biliary cholangitis (pbc) and reumathoid arthirtis (ra)

Clinical Characteristics

The patient was admitted for a routine check-up. Abdominal ultrasound revealed multiple liver masses with a maximum size of 33 mm. CT showed low-attenuation areas with mild peripheral enhancement at the arterial and portal phase, suggesting the development of metastatic liver tumors. A percutaneous liver biopsy showed liver tissue with cell shedding, fibrotic changes, and infiltration of inflammatory cells, including lymphocytes and macrophages. There were no malignant findings. Inflammatory pseudotumor was suspected i

Remission Characteristics

After two months of observation, the tumors spontaneously regressed and nearly vanished

Treatment & Mechanisms

Clinical Treatment

Biopsy