Abstract

Introduction: The presence of pancreatic tissue that lacks anatomical or vascular communication with the pancreatic organ has a frequency in autopsy studies that ranges between 0.5% and 13.7%. It is most commonly found in the stomach, specifically in the antrum. Treatment is not clearly established. Surgical resection is recommended in symptomatic patients whose only cause of symptoms is ectopic pancreatic tissue or cancerous formations. Objective: Report a case of ectopic pancreatic adenoma given its low incidence. Case Report: This study reports the case of a 45-year-old male with a history of clinical diagnosis of gastroesophageal reflux disease and a Nissen fundoplication. He presented poor evolution 6 months after the surgery. An endoscopy which revealed postpyloric “polyp” at the level of the duodenal bulb and an inconclusive histopathological study of the same were performed. Reassessment with CT showed a tumor in the first portion of the duodenum measured at 2.2cm, without adenopathies, and a normal-appearing pancreas. It has been made a subtotal gastrectomy and Roux “Y” reconstruction, without complications, with good postoperative evolution, discharged at home on the sixth day. With hematoxylin and eosin technique, the histopathology report reported bile duct adenoma originating in ectopic pancreatic tissue, positive immunohistochemistry for cytokeratin 7 (IHC-7), predominantly expressed by ductal epithelial cells of the pancreatobiliary tract. The patient after surgery had a good clinical evolution and disappearance of symptoms. Conclusion: The clinical cases of rare pathologies are presented to increase the world bibliography and to be able to compare the diagnosis and treatment. In this case, a heterotopic pancreatic adenoma was presented, which is a diagnostic challenge.

Highlights

  • The presence of pancreatic tissue that lacks anatomical or vascular communication with the pancreatic organ has a frequency in autopsy studies that ranges between 0.5% and 13.7%

  • Surgical resection is recommended in symptomatic patients whose only cause of symptoms is ectopic pancreatic tissue or cancerous formations

  • Case Report: This study reports the case of a 45-year-old male with a history of clinical diagnosis of gastroesophageal reflux disease and a Nissen fundoplication

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Summary

Case Report

Adrián Reynol Sosa Mejía[2], Raquel Quiroga Coronado[1], Pamela Frigerio1*, Raúl Portillo Cordero[3], Jesús Pablo Gil Muro[4], Juan Jesús Ojeda Ibarra[5] and Enrique Nuñez Flores[6]

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