Article

Ultrasonographic Appearance of Gallbladder Neoplasia in 14 Dogs and 1 Cat

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Abstract

Ultrasonography is the most commonly used diagnostic imaging tool for gallbladder disease in veterinary medicine. Primary gallbladder neoplasia is an uncommon finding with variable prognosis for which no studies have been published describing their ultrasonographic appearance and diagnosis. This retrospective, multicenter, case series study examines the ultrasonographic appearance of gallbladder neoplasia with histologically or cytologically confirmed diagnoses. A total of 14 dogs and 1 cat were analyzed. All discrete masses were sessile in shape and varied in size, echogenicity, location, and gallbladder wall thickening. All studies with images showing Doppler interrogation exhibited vascularity. Cholecystoliths were an uncommon finding, being present in only one case in this study, unlike in humans. The final diagnosis of the gallbladder neoplasia was neuroendocrine carcinoma (8), leiomyoma (3), lymphoma (1), gastrointestinal stromal tumor (1), extrahepatic cholangiocellular carcinoma (1), and adenoma (1). Findings from this study indicate that primary gallbladder neoplasms have variable sonographic appearances and cytologic and histologic diagnoses.

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... The presence of bile in the abdominal cavity is due to the spontaneous or iatrogenic (i.e., surgery) rupture of the biliary system. Cholangitis (primary or sequela to the gallbladder disease), obstruction of a bile duct, neoplasia of the biliary system, and trauma are the most frequent conditions causing the leakage of bile from the biliary system reported in the literature [6,7]. Canine cholangitis is often related to bacterial infection. ...
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A 13-year-old neutered female Keeshond-cross was evaluated because of a history of melena, anemia, hematemesis, vomiting, and high serum liver enzyme activities over a 1.5-year period. Abdominal ultrasonography revealed a hyperechoic mass in the gallbladder. In the gallbladder mass itself, a distinct linear blood flow pattern was detected by use of color flow Doppler ultrasonography. A cholecystectomy was performed, and clinical signs resolved. Samples of the mass were examined histologically and immunohistochemically, and findings supported a diagnosis of neuroendocrine tumor of the gallbladder. Tumors of the biliary tree are a potential source of blood loss into the gastrointestinal tract. Color flow Doppler ultrasonography in conjunction with conventional grayscale ultrasonography may be useful in evaluation of the gallbladder in dogs. When echogenic material is detected in the gallbladder, it is important to evaluate the region for blood flow.
Article
Primary gallbladder sarcoma (PGBS) is rare, with only 39 documented cases, with the predominant type being leiomyosarcoma. Cases recorded as "gallbladder sarcoma" were retrieved from our files; the clinicopathologic features were reviewed and recorded. Only primary gallbladder wall mesenchymal tumors were included. Epithelial tumors, mixed tumors (carcinosarcoma or sarcomatoid carcinoma), tumors extending into the gallbladder from the abdomen, or sarcoma with other known primaries were excluded. PGBS occurred in 4 males and 11 females with the adult median age of 68.5 (range: 24 to 88 y, n=12) and 3 children ages 1.5 to 3 years, the latter all with botryoid embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. Patients presented with acute and/or chronic cholecystitis, abdominal pain, weight loss, pruritus, elevated alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin, and leukocytosis. The median tumor size was 4.5 cm, mean tumor size 5.7 cm, and range 2.0 to 14.0 cm. Most PGBS involved the entire wall and ulcerated the mucosa. PGBSs were diagnosed as 7 myxofibrosarcomas [malignant fibrous histiocytoma, storiform pleomorphic to myxoid, 2 with an unusual fibromyxoid sarcoma-like (Evans-like), and pleomorphic hyalinizing angiectatic tumor-like mixture], 2 leiomyosarcomas, 1 gastrointestinal stromal tumor-like (GIST-like), 3 botryoid embryonal rhabdomyosarcomas (RMS), and 2 epithelioid angiosarcomas. Diagnosis was based on morphology and immunohistochemistry. A diagnosis of LMS required myoid-intersecting fascicles and diffuse, strong immunoreactivity for smooth muscle actin +/- desmin. RMS revealed myxoid grape-like hypocellular tumor with stellate cells, mild atypia, mitoses and desmin, and myoregulatory protein (MyoD1) and skeletal muscle-specific myogenin (Myf4) reactivity. The GIST-like sarcoma was palisaded and myoid-like but failed to stain for CD34 or CD117. Angiosarcomas demonstrated an extravascular proliferation of atypical epithelioid endothelial cells, and mitotic activity. All cases were negative for S100 protein, HMB45, keratins, and CK18. All patients received cholecystectomy and 6 known adjuvant therapy. Follow-up of 12 revealed that 7 patients died of disease within 3 weeks to 1 year and 4 months after diagnosis, 3 died of unknown causes, and 2, both adjuvant therapy treated botryoid RMS in young children, were alive without disease 11 and 27 years later. PGBSs are rare. Carcinosarcoma, spindle cell carcinoma (by use of keratins and CK18), and melanoma must first be excluded. A variety of sarcoma types are found, yet malignant fibrous histiocytoma is the predominant variant, more common than LMS. GIST is a controversial sarcoma in gallbladder; angiosarcoma can rarely occur in this location. PGBS mainly occur in older female adults and have overall poor prognosis. A subgroup of adjuvant therapy-treated botryoid embryonal RMS in the gallbladder of young children, although rare, can have excellent prognosis.
Article
Gallbladder neoplasia resulting in hemobilia and hemocholecyst is a rare condition in humans and, to the authors' knowledge, has not been reported previously in the veterinary literature. Hemobilia is defined as upper gastrointestinal bleeding that originates from within the biliary tract and can be caused by any abnormal communication between the biliary tract and blood vessels.(1) Hemocholecyst is described as nontraumatic accumulation of blood or a blood clot within the gallbladder.(2) About 30-40% of affected human patients present with the classical triad of clinical features attributable to hemobilia or hemocholecyst, which include upper gastrointestinal tract bleeding, abdominal pain, and jaundice. Hemobilia can progress to hemocholecyst, cholecystitis, and extrahepatic biliary duct obstruction (EHBDO).(1-3) Neuroendocrine carcinoma (carcinoid) arising from the gallbladder is uncommon in humans and extremely rare in dogs, with only 2 reported occurrences in the veterinary literature.(4-7) In humans, primary gallbladder and biliary duct system carcinoids constitute < 1% of all carcinoid tumors arising from any tissue or organ in the body.(8) This report describes 2 dogs with hemobilia and hemocholecyst secondary to gallbladder carcinoid. Clinical findings include acute vomiting, jaundice, melena, and hematemesis.
Article
Eighty patients with primary carcinoma of the gallbladder were studied by ultrasonography. Two broad groups were defined. In group I (72.5%), the gallbladder lumen was identified along with a mass lesion, and in group II (27.5%), a large mass totally replacing the gallbladder was seen. Group I was further categorized into three subtypes according to the morphology of the lesion: type 1—a mass almost filling the lumen; type 2—a polypoidal mass projecting into the lumen; and type 3—an infiltrating mass. Associated findings of infiltration of the liver, presence of calculi, biliary tree obstruction, liver metastasis, and lymphadenopathy further supported the diagnosis. Ultrasonography was found to be highly reliable in the diagnosis of carcinoma of the gallbladder. In addition, it provided guidance for biopsy/aspiration of nonpalpable tumors. Its shortcomings appear to be its inability to assess peritoneal and bowel involvement, as well as that of the omentum and posterior rectus sheath.
Article
A review of the most relevant clinical data of patients with primary carcinoma of the gall bladder referred to our hospital over a 16-year-period has indicated that this is the third most common and aggressive cancer of the gastrointestinal tract. The disease occurs predominantly in elderly females who often present with extremes of clinical symptoms indicating benign biliary disease on the one hand and incurable malignant disease on the other. Laboratory and roentgenographic data tend to confirm the clinical diagnosis of this almost entirely incurable disease. The overall 5-year survival of the patients with primary carcinoma of the gall bladder is less than 1%; a majority of the patients are dead in less than 6 months.
Article
Twenty-four adenocarcinomas of the hepatobiliary system were found among 110 primary hepatic neoplasms: 22 of these were intrahepatic, one involved the extrahepatic bile duct and one the gall bladder. Histologically, 10 intrahepatic neoplasms were classified as cholangiocarcinoma, and 12 as bile duct cystadenocarcinoma. The former were characterized by tubular structures lined by anaplastic cuboidal or columnar cells with diffuse fibrous stroma, and the latter by multiple cystic structures with papillary and solid areas. Half the bile duct cystadenocarcinomas showed benign cysts and transition to adenocarcinomas. This was seen in only one case of cholangiocarcinoma. The extrahepatic bile duct carcinoma was characterized by tubular structures lined with flattened cuboidal cells with scant stroma. The gall bladder adenocarcinoma contained many acinar structures lined with columnar or cuboidal cells and separated by thin stroma. Distant metastasis was found in 87.5% (21 of 24) sites of metastasis.
Article
The computed tomographic and sonographic findings of 26 patients with gallbladder carcinoma were reviewed, and the problems and pitfalls encountered with these imaging techniques are discussed. The most common finding, a mass filling or replacing the gallbladder, was seen in 42% of the patients. A mass protruding into the gallbladder was seen in 23%, and diffuse asymmetric thickening of the gallbladder wall in 15%. Recommendations are made to avoid some of the diagnostic problems encountered. With careful and meticulous technique early carcinoma of the gallbladder may be detected with greater frequency by cross-sectional imaging techniques.
Article
Although the ultrasonic detection of gallbladder sludge is relatively frequent, its clinical importance remains unclear, partly because of the paucity of reliable investigations regarding its natural course in patients without stones. In a retrospective study we investigated the course and clinical significance of gallbladder sludge in patients without stones or other identified gallbladder abnormalities. The diagnosis of gallbladder sludge was made by ultrasound scan in 286 (1.7%) of 17,021 patients. The mean follow-up period for these patients was 20.3 +/- 11.5 mo. Of this group 56 patients were without both stones and sludge at the initial examination, and gallbladder sludge developed after a mean observation period of 11.2 +/- 10.6 mo. Within 2.0 +/- 3.5 mo after sludge detection, 40 (71.4%) patients were free of sludge and showed normal gallbladder findings. Gallbladder stones without sludge persistence developed in five patients (8.9%) within 2.5 +/- 0.6 mo after diagnosis of sludge, and gallstones with persistence of sludge developed in two other patients (3.6%) after 6.1 and 30.7 mo, respectively. In no cases did the stones become clinically symptomatic in the course of the follow-up period. Acute acalculous cholecystitis developed in four patients (7.1%) from 6.5 to 37.5 mo after the first examination. In five patients, sludge persisted after a mean 22.3 +/- 13.5 mo of follow-up. Although our data show that gallbladder sludge disappeared spontaneously within a relatively short time in 71.4% of patients, gallbladder sludge must be considered an important pathologic entity because gallbladder stones or complications such as acute cholecystitis occurred in 19.6% of patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Article
A case of a large polypoidal gallbladder carcinoma presenting with empyema is described. Heterogeneous echoes filled the gallbladder lumen on gray-scale sonography. Color Doppler ultrasound detected vascularity within the gallbladder lumen, thereby differentiating the intraluminal tumor from isoechoic sludge and pus. Correlative computed tomography showed an enhancing intraluminal mass, with small enhancing vessels that corresponded to those seen with color Doppler sonography.
Article
Primary carcinoma of the gallbladder is an uncommon, aggressive malignancy that affects women more frequently than men. Older age groups are most often affected, and coexisting gallstones are present in the vast majority of cases. The symptoms at presentation are vague and are most often related to adjacent organ invasion. Therefore, despite advances in cross-sectional imaging, early-stage tumors are not often encountered. Imaging studies may reveal a mass replacing the normal gallbladder, diffuse or focal thickening of the gallbladder wall, or a polypoid mass within the gallbladder lumen. Adjacent organ invasion, most commonly involving the liver, is typically present at diagnosis, as is biliary obstruction. Periportal and peripancreatic lymphadenopathy, hematogenous metastases, and peritoneal metastases may also be seen. The vast majority of gallbladder carcinomas are adenocarcinomas. Because most patients present with advanced disease, the prognosis is poor, with a reported 5-year survival rate of less than 5% in most large series. The radiologic differential diagnosis includes the more frequently encountered inflammatory conditions of the gallbladder, xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis, adenomyomatosis, other hepatobiliary malignancies, and metastatic disease.
Article
In a retrospective study (1995) cytological diagnoses of 3987 specimen of different origin in the dog were evaluated. Biopsies were performed at the Department of Clinical Sciences of Companion animals at the University of Utrecht or sent in by external practitioners. Biopsies were obtained from different regions including skin/subcutis, mammary gland, lymph node, external ear canal, kidney, urinary bladder, urethra, prostatic gland, testes, bone, bone marrow, synovia, nose, oral cavity, cerebrospinal fluid, bronchial lavage, lung, spleen, liver, conjunctiva, and retrobulbar region. The majority of biopsies were obtained from skin/subcutis (n = 1815), lymph node (n = 706), and mammary gland (n = 415). A high percentage of non-diagnostic biopsies were observed with biopsies of lung, mammary gland, cerebrospinal fluid, external ear canal, and oral cavity. The frequencies of diagnoses in the different areas will be presented and the diagnostic indications of cytology are discussed.
Article
A cholecystectomy was performed on a 10-year-old spayed female mixed-breed dog with chronic weight loss, persistently increased liver enzyme activities, and cholecystomegaly identified by ultrasonographic examination. A subsequent diagnosis of a biliary carcinoid was made based on a neuroendocrine-type histologic pattern, cytoplasmic argyrophilia by Grimelius staining, immunopositivity for chromogranin A, and the ultrastructural finding of cytoplasmic secretory granules in neoplastic cells. Extrahepatic biliary carcinoid tumors are rare tumors of humans and have not been documented in domestic animals.
Article
Precise preoperative staging for gallbladder carcinoma is difficult, despite recent advances in hepatobiliary imaging. However, the most accurate preoperative staging may be possible by integrating preoperative key data. To establish useful strategies for the surgical treatment of gallbladder cancer based on information available before resection. Retrospective review. University hospital and tertiary referral cancer center. Patients and From January 1, 1978, through March 31, 2001, 152 patients with gallbladder cancer underwent surgical resection with curative intent. Preoperative diagnoses of the T factor (image-T) and N factor (image-N) in the TNM classification were determined by evaluating all findings of diagnostic imaging, including ultrasonography, enhanced computed tomography, endoscopic ultrasonography, and angiography. The distribution of lymph node metastasis and prognostic factors were also analyzed. The overall diagnostic accuracy for image-T was 52.6% (95% confidence interval, 44.7%-60.6%) and was lower in patients with pT1 and pT2 disease (37.2% and 33.9%, respectively). However, image-T was a significant predictor of lymph node metastasis and patient outcome. Preoperative staging for N was more difficult, with only 24.5% (95% confidence interval, 12.4%-36.5%) of the node-positive patients being correctly diagnosed. An analysis of harvested lymph nodes showed that the cystic, pericholedochal, and posterosuperior peripancreatic nodes were the most prevalent sites of metastasis, and these were considered key nodes for the lymphatic spread of gallbladder cancer. By combining data on image-T and positivity of these key nodes, more accurate TNM staging was possible. Although an extended lymph node dissection provided significantly better survival in patients with pN2 disease, there was no survival advantage to more radical operations, including bile duct resection or pancreaticoduodenectomy. Although precise preoperative TNM staging for gallbladder carcinoma was difficult, the most accurate staging before resection was possible by integrating image-T classification and data from the intraoperative histopathologic examination of key lymph nodes. Based on this staging, we propose algorithms for the surgical treatment of gallbladder carcinoma.
Article
The poor prognosis of gallbladder cancer (GBC) is related to its dissemination capacity and usually late diagnosis due to its non-specific clinical appearance. Recent improvements in hepatobiliary surgery have underlined the importance of an early specific diagnosis, which requires a multidisciplinary approach and, when possible, specialized equipment. The first step in an early diagnosis is to identify patients in the appropriate epidemiological setting (e.g., incidental finding, chronic cholecystitis) for the correct interpretation of test results. It is desirable to enhance the sensitivity of the initial ultrasound (US) examination by use of the appropriate technology in skilled specialist hands. When GBC is suggested by US findings, FDG-PET can be considered complementary to establish the benign/malignant nature of the lesion and to obtain a primary staging study. If GBC is confirmed, thin slice spiral CT can contribute valuable information on local spread. In this regard, recent hybrid PET-CT systems provide structural and functional information simultaneously and may offer early and accurate T, N, and M staging with an improved specificity.
Diagnosis and management polypoid lesions of the gall bladder in a dog
  • Adel A.
Acta Scientiae Veterinariae
  • T.T. Diogenes
  • M.A. Rocha
  • K.O. Sampaio
  • R.G. Olinda
  • D.C.S.N. Pinheiro
  • R.P. Sousa Filho
Gallbladder sludge on ultrasound is predictive of increased liver enzymes and total bilirubin in cats
  • N. Harran
  • M.A. Anjou
  • M. Dunn
  • G. Beauchamp
Bile duct carcinoma in the cat: three case reports
  • B F A C Feldman
  • Strafuss
  • Gabbert