Primary immature teratoma in the liver with growing teratoma syndrome and gliomatosis peritonei: a rare case report

RenMing Liu & Na Cheng et al. · 2022-10-29

5Citations

Abstract

Background

Primary liver immature teratoma is extremely rare and only 4 cases have been reported, let alone with growing teratoma syndrome (GTS) and/or gliomatosis peritonei (GP).

Case presentation

Here, we report a case of a 44-year-old female presenting with progressive abdominal distension and elevated serum alpha fetal protein (AFP) level. CT/MRI scans revealed a large cystic-solid mass in the right lobe of the liver, accompanied with implant or metastasis in the abdominal cavity. Pathologic examination at biopsy suggested immature teratoma. After 4 cycles of chemotherapy, an MRI showed a slight increase in tumor size. Therefore, surgical resection of the right lobe of the liver was performed. The final histological diagnosis was a mature teratoma (tumor size 28 cm × 14 cm × 13 cm), with no residual immature component, and the diagnosis of GTS was considered. The patient continued to receive 2 courses of postoperative chemotherapy. An abdominal CT scan revealed innumerable miliary nodules in bilateral adnexal areas 2 months after surgery. Histologically, large numbers of mature glia were observed, supporting the diagnosis of GP.

Conclusions

We report for the first time a case of primary liver immature teratoma with GTS and GP in an adult. Longer follow-up is needed to assess definitive efficacy.

TL;DR

It is reported for the first time a case of primary liver immature teratoma with GTS and GP in an adult, and longer follow-up is needed to assess definitive efficacy.

AI-generated by Semantic Scholar

Authors
RenMing Liu, JianNing Chen, ChunKui Shao, Na Cheng
Funding

Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province

2018A030313650

Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province

2019A1515011455

National Natural Science Foundation of China

82073397