Abstract

Three cases of a distinctive intraductal tubular adenoma, pyloric type, of the main pancreatic duct are reported. The patients, two women and a man, whose ages ranged from 63 to 70 years, complained of abdominal pain attributed to chronic pancreatitis in two patients. The patient with the largest tumor also had symptoms of gastric outlet obstruction. The tumors, two of which arose in the head and one in the tail of the pancreas, led to occlusion and cystic dilatation of the main pancreatic duct. Two adenomas were sessile and one was attached to the wall of the pancreatic duct by a thin fibrous stalk. Microscopically, they were composed of lobules of closely packed tubular glands similar to pyloric glands. In one tumor, nearly all glands were lined by columnar mucin-secreting cells with abundant clear cytoplasm and basally oriented nuclei. In addition to pyloric glands, two adenomas contained glands lined by cells with little or no mucin as well as by pink oncocytic cells. Focal intestinal differentiation was identified in one tumor. Both intracellular and extracellular mucin was detected with the mucicarmine, periodic acid-Schiff, and alcian blue stains. All three adenomas were CK7 positive and CK20 negative. Focal carcinoembryonic antigen linear reactivity along the apical cytoplasm was seen in many cells, but few cells expressed cytoplasmic carcinoembryonic antigen. All three adenomas showed low proliferative activity as measured by the MIB-1 labeling index. The three adenomas were p53 negative and showed loss of DPC4 expression. No endocrine cells were identified in any of the tumors. All patients are alive and symptom free from 4 months to 5 years following surgical treatment.

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