Abstract

Hepatocellular adenomas (HCA) in infants are exceedingly rare with only 5 cases reported to the best of our knowledge, all of them preceding the classification of HCA. Here we present an autopsy case of a 9-month-old girl with Burn-McKeown syndrome with an incidental liver nodule in the right lobe measuring 1.5cm in greatest dimension. The lesion was composed of an unencapsulated proliferation of hepatocytes with multiple unaccompanied arteries without well-formed portal tracts, and an intact reticulin framework without thickened hepatic plates, findings consistent with an HCA. Glutamine synthetase (GS), lipid fatty acid-binding protein (LFABP), c-reactive protein (CRP), serum amyloid-a (SAA), beta-catenin and CD34 immunostains were performed. GS was diffusely and strongly positive in the lesion, CD34 showed heterogenous staining of sinusoids within the lesion without a well-formed rim from the background liver and beta-catenin was negative for nuclear staining. CRP and SAA were considered negative, and LFABP was retained. Molecular testing showed no CTNNB1 variants and found two tier 3 variants involving CHEK2 and PTEN genes. These findings are consistent with an unclassified HCA (U-HCA) per the 2019 WHO Classification of Tumors, representing the youngest patient reported. This raises the possibility that some HCAs are congenital or develop very early in life, remaining undiagnosed until later in life.

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