Abstract

Abstract Introduction Gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GISTs) are sarcomas and the most common non-epithelial cancers of the GI tract. Patient A 77-year old man with life threatening melaena, drop in haemoglobin from 109 to 71 in 24 hours and hypotension. Co-morbidities included COPD, chronic microcytic anaemia, type 2 Diabetes mellitus and hypertension. Anaemia for 9 years had been investigated with OGD and colonoscopy showing no pathology. Calculated Rockall score was 6. An Urgent Oesophagogastroduodenoscopy showed normal findings with no source of bleeding identified. An urgent CT angiography demonstrated a vascular blush at duodenojejunal (DJ) flexure identified as the source of bleeding. Four units of was blood transfused preoperatively. The bleeding source was not embolisable. He underwent an initial diagnostic laparoscopy to confirm the site of the lesion and ascertaining whether resection and anastomosis would be visible. Findings at laparoscopy included a DJ flexure lesion. A midline mini-laparotomy, wedge resection of the lesion with a hand-sewn anastomosis was performed. He had a prolonged hospital stay with gastroparaesis and high nasogastric tube output. Histology showed a well-demarcated, lobulated bland spindle cell lesion. The tumour is composed of cells with mainly blunt ended nuclei. There is strong positive staining to CD117 and DOG-1. There is focal positive staining to Desmin and SMA. The tumour is negative for S100 AND but Pankeratin. Overall, MDT felt that this was a 30mm DJ flexure GIST with less than 5 mitoses per 50mm2. R1 achieved resection but with a low risk (4.3%) of recurrence based on the histological characteristics.

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