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Clear cell HCC mimicking to hepatic adenoma
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  1. Ali Kemal Sivrioglu1,
  2. Muzaffer Saglam2,
  3. Mehmet Incedayi2,
  4. Guner Sonmez2
  1. 1Department of Radiology, Aksaz Military Hospital, Mugla, Turkey
  2. 2Department of Radiology, GATA Haydarpasa Teaching Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey
  1. Correspondence to Dr Mehmet Incedayi, m_incedayi{at}yahoo.com

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Description

A 60-year-old man was complaining of a postprandial heartburn and of abdominal distention. Physical examination was normal except for nodular, painless hepatomegaly. γ-Glutamyl transferase (GGT), alanine transferase (ALT) and aspartate transferase (AST) levels were 88 (normal range, 11–66 U/l), 75 (normal level <40 U/l) and 56 U/l (normal level <40 U/l), respectively. Tumour markers including α-fetoprotein 120.7 ng/ml (normal range 0–7 ng/ml) and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) 2.2 ng/ml (normal range 0–5.2 ng/ml). Viral serological studies were HBsAg (+), HBsAb (−), HBV DNA (+), anti-Delta (−) and anti-HCV (−). Other blood test results were within normal limits.

Posteroanterior chest X-ray was normal. Ultrasonographic examination of the liver showed diffuse increased echogenicity and coarse echotexture. A large mixed echogenic mass was seen in the right hepatic lobe. CT showed heterogeneously hypodense mass lesions with fatty change on non-contrast scans and enhance heterogeneously on both arterial phase and venous phase postcontrast scans (figures 1 and 2). Following tru-cut biopsy, it was ascertained to be a clear cell hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).

Figure 1

Axial non-contrast CT image showing heterogeneously hypodense mass lesions with a macroscopic fatty change.

Figure 2

On axial contrast-enhanced CT image, lesions showing enhancement heterogeneously on arterial phase.

Clear cell HCC may include large fatty areas and this is often misdiagnosed to be an adenoma. Clear cell HCC cannot be differentiated with imaging methods from hepatic adenoma including macroscopic fatty tissue.1 ,2 However if the patient is man and has a chronic liver disease, the diagnosis will be strongly clear cell HCC instead of adenoma. Tru-cut biopsy is the best choice in diagnosis. Clear cell HCC is characterised by high female prevalence (the male-to-female ratio is 2.3:1, lower than the 6.9:1 of non-clear cell HCC), high rate of association with liver cirrhosis and has no significant difference in prognosis compared with non-clear cell HCC.3

Learning points

  • Clear cell hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) may include large fatty areas.

  • Clear cell HCC cannot be differentiated with imaging methods from hepatic adenoma including macroscopic fatty tissue.

References

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests None.

  • Patient consent Obtained.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.