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Malignant transformation of hepatic adenomas.

Modern Pathology 2008 April
Hepatic adenomas are benign neoplasms of the liver that occur in several well-defined clinical settings, but principally that of excess hormone exposure. They have a small but poorly characterized risk of malignant degeneration. The clinical presentation and pathological findings were reviewed for all hepatic adenomas resected between January 1, 2003 and July 1, 2006. Immunohistochemistry for p53, beta-catenin and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) were performed on those cases with malignant transformation and exon 3 of beta-catenin was amplified and sequenced. A total of 17 hepatic adenomas were resected and 3 showed malignant transformation. All three cases were in women with an age range of 23-33 years. The clinical presentations were vague abdominal pain. Histologically, the malignant transformation occurred within otherwise typical hepatic adenomas. Two of three cases showed patchy atypia throughout the hepatic adenoma. The hepatocellular carcinoma arose as distinct nodules directly within the adenomas, effectively ruling out synchronous lesions. The hepatocellular carcinomas were unifocal in two cases and multifocal in one case with the greatest dimensions of the hepatocellular carcinoma being 2.5, 2.2, and 1 cm. Immunostains for AFP and beta-catenin were negative in both the hepatic adenomas and areas of hepatocellular carcinoma. p53 immunostaining was positive within the areas of malignant transformation in one case. No mutations or deletions were seen in exon 3 of the beta-catenin gene for either the adenomas or the carcinoma. In conclusion, two of the cases that developed hepatocellular carcinomas showed cytological atypia in the background adenoma. The hepatocellular carcinomas arose as distinct nodules within the adenomas. No common molecular pathway of hepatocellular carcinogenesis was observed by examining AFP, beta-catenin, and p53 immunostains and no beta-catenin mutations or deletions were found.

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