Yonsei Med J. 2001 Aug;42(4):431-435. English.
Published online Apr 03, 2009.
Copyright © 2001 The Yonsei University College of Medicine
Case Report

Teratoid Hepatoblastoma: Multidirectional Differentiation of Stem Cell of the Liver

Lucia Kim, Young Nyun Park, Sung Eun Kim, Tae Woong Noh and Chanil Park
    • Department of Pathology and Brain Korea 21 Project for Medical Sciences, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Received November 16, 2000; Accepted March 07, 2001.

Abstract

Hepatoblastoma is the most common malignant hepatic neoplasm of childhood, showing a wide spectrum of epithelial and mesenchymal components. Teratoid hepatoblastoma, which reveals multiple lines of tissue differentiation such as mucinous epithelium, melanin pigment, endocrine differentiation, glial and mesenchymal components, has rarely been observed. We report a case of teratoid hepatoblastoma in a 22-month-old girl. She had been diagnosed with hepatoblastoma through percutaneous needle biopsy of the liver and treated with 10 chemotherapy cycles of epirubicin, VP-16 and cisplatin and with hepatic artery embolization. After 10 months, an extended left lobectomy was performed. Grossly, a multinodular, partly well-demarcated, solid mass (7 × 5 cm) with dense fibrosis and focal cystic change occupied almost the entire specimen. There was extensive necrosis due to preoperative treatment. Microscopically, the tumor showed multiple lines of differentiation, which was composed of embryonal, fetal hepatocytes and mesenchymal elements with numerous foci of osteoid. There were also other components showing endodermal, neural, melanocytic and endocrine differentiation. These teratoid components were considered relatively resistant to preoperative chemotherapy, in contrast to extensive necrosis of both embryonal and fetal hepatocytes. These teratoid features of hepatoblastoma are considered to be a multidirectional differentiation of the small epithelial cells or stem cells of the tumor.

Keywords
Hepatoblastoma; teratoid; multidirectional differentiation; stem cell; liver; chemotherapy


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