Abstract

Gastric teratoma is an uncommon tumor and usually occurs in infancy or childhood. To the authors' knowledge, malignant transformation in gastric teratoma has not been reported previously. An 83-year-old Japanese man presented with a large polypoid gastric tumor composed of teratomatous components and invasive adenocarcinoma. Numerous blocks of this tumor were analyzed histologically and immunohistochemically. Histologically, the gastric tumor consisted of teratomatous components with diverse maturation, such as fibroblastic mesenchymal cells, striated muscle cells, cartilaginous islands, neuroepithelial components, glial tissues, squamous cell nests, glandular components, and foci of adenocarcinoma infiltrating the benign gastric tissues adjacent to the tumor stalk. Metastatic foci of teratomatous components in the resected lymph nodes contained adenocarcinomatous glands. An immunohistochemical study helped confirm the differentiation in the immature components and the differential diagnosis between atypical neuroepithelial cells and the adenocarcinoma. This study indicates that the adenocarcinoma arose from immature gastric teratoma. A review of the literature suggests that this is the oldest reported patient with gastric teratoma and to the authors' knowledge is the first report describing gastric teratoma with malignant transformation.

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