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Clinical Data
A 70-year-old female presented to our attention with an incidental finding, of a gastric mass, during videolaparoscopic cholecystectomy; the surgeon described a mass forming lesion within the gastric wall that did not erose the serosa. The patient underwent different gastroscopies, and during the last gastroscopic control, the endoscopist found a significant increasement of the well-known mass (2 cm in diameter), located in the gastric antrum nearby the pylorum laying in the greater curvature. According to the macroscopic findings, our first diagnostic hypothesis was of GIST. Then, an EUS-FNA (Fig. 1) was performed with on-site cytopathology assistance to evaluate the adequacy of material. The cytopathology smear showed a population of uniform, round epithelioid cells, with relatively small nucleoli and variable eosinophilic cytoplasm, which stained for smooth muscle actin but were negative for desmin, chromogranin, synapthophisin, and keratin (Fig. 2). A final cytological diagnosis of glomus tumor (GT) of the stomach was obtained. The patient underwent a CT scan (Fig. 3) that confirmed the presence of a hyperdense lesion of about 14 mm, in the absence of lymphadenomegaly or metastatic disease. There weren’t any contraindications for surgery, so we decided to perform a gastric laparoscopic wedge resection of the lesion (Fig. 4). Laparoscopy is a good minimally invasive technique in case of small and benign tumors, which allowed us to discharge the patient in the fourth postoperative day. Macroscopically, the lesion measured 2.5 × 1.6 × 1.2 cm with well-defined borders and rubbery consistency. The histological examination confirmed the cytological diagnosis of GT of the stomach with surgical margins free of disease.
Discussion
The glomus apparatus consists of three vascular components: an afferent artery separated from an efferent venule by convoluted channels. They are commonly observed wherever arteriovenous anastomoses functioning without an intermediary capillary bed are present, are sensitive to temperature variation, and play a role in regulating arterial blood flow. Glomus tumors (GTs) are commonly described in the extremities and are less common in the visceral organs.1 GT of the stomach are usually bigger than the cutaneous forms measuring on average 2–2.5 cm in size and are more commonly located in the antrum. Clinical presentation may vary, going from a recovery in the emergency room due to gastrointestinal bleeding (hematemesis and/or melena) to an epigastric discomfort or chronic anemia. At endoscopy, glomus gastric tumors look as submucosal masses with a smooth surface or ulceration on the top often misdiagnosed as gastric cancer or gastric stromal tumor. EUS-FNA is an effective method to obtain cytological material of gastric submucosal neoplasms with an accuracy rate of 95.6% and represents a rapid cost-effective method to differentiate GTs from more aggressive gastric tumors.2
The main diagnostic modalities for evaluating submucosal tumors are endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) and CT scan (computed tomography) but is the pathological exam that can really give us an accurate diagnosis of GT, specially, in those cases in which diagnosis through imaging is not feasible. GTs have shown positivity in the histoimmunochemical panel of tissue markers such as smooth muscle actin and type IV collagen. Other markers, including desmin, cytokeratin (AE1/AE3b), S-100 protein, creatine kinase, C-KIT (CD-117), CD34, DOG1 protein (K9), chromogranin A, p53 protein, and neuron specific enolase, were negative. Immunohistochemical markers are key to diagnose these tumors in order to differentiate GTs from stromal, vascular, and lymphatic tumors.3
GTs are essentially benign in nature; therefore, wedge resection or subtotal gastrectomy to remove the tumor and its envelope can cure the patient and supply a good prognosis.
Conclusions
At the moment, there are no clear guidelines regarding the optimal therapy for glomus tumors of the stomach. We believe that the gold standard during diagnosis ought to be EUS-FNA which gives us a more accurate diagnosis of the lesion. It is our belief that after diagnosis has been made, considering the benign behavior of this lesion and in the absence of clear malignancy parameters, complete surgical removal of the tumor, preferably by laparoscopic (wedge resection) technique, is a reasonable therapeutical choice.
Abbreviations
- EUS-FNA:
-
Endoscopic ultrasound-fine needle aspiration
- CT:
-
Computed tomography
- GIST:
-
Gastrointestinal stromal tumors
- MRI:
-
Magnetic resonance imaging
References
Vinette-Leduc D, Yazdi HM. Fine-Needle aspiration biopsy of a glomus tumor of the stomach. Diagn Cytopathol 2001;5(24):340-342.
Kang G, Jung Park H, Yeon Kim J, Choi D, Hoon Min B, Lee JH, Kim JJ, Kim KM, Park CK, Sohn TS, Kim S. Glomus tumor of the stomach: a clinicopathological analysis of 10 cases and review of the literature. Gut Liver 2012;6:52-57.
Kato S, Kikuchi K, Chinen K, Murakami T, Kunishima F. Diagnostic utility of endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy for glomus tumor of the stomach. World J Gastroenterol 2015;21:7052-7058.
Author Contribution
Carolina Castro Ruiz states to have participated on the conception of the work, the acquisition of the clinical data and literature research, the drafting of the work and its critical revision, as well as the final approval of the version to be published and agrees to be accountable for all aspects of the work.
Gabriele Carlinfante states to have participated on the conception of the work, the acquisition of the clinical data, the drafting of the work and its critical revision, as well as the final approval of the version to be published and agrees to be accountable for all aspects of the work.
Maurizio Zizzo states to have participated on the conception of the work, the literature research, the drafting of the work and its critical revision, as well as the final approval of the version to be published and agrees to be accountable for all aspects of the work.
Alessandro Giunta states to have participated on the conception of the work, the acquisition of the clinical data, the drafting of the work and its critical revision, as well as the final approval of the version to be published and agrees to be accountable for all aspects of the work.
Ronzoni Roberto states to have participated on the conception of the work, the acquisition of the clinical data, the drafting of the work and its critical revision, as well as the final approval of the version to be published and agrees to be accountable for all aspects of the work.
Francesco Azzolini states to have participated on the conception of the work, the acquisition of the clinical data, the drafting of the work and its critical revision, as well as the final approval of the version to be published and agrees to be accountable for all aspects of the work.
Claudio Pedrazzoli states to have participated on the conception of the work, the acquisition of the clinical data, the drafting of the work and its critical revision, as well as the final approval of the version to be published and agrees to be accountable for all aspects of the work.
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This study has received financial support from Azienda Ospedaliera—IRCCS Arcispedale Santa Maria Nuova Founds.
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Castro Ruiz, C., Carlinfante, G., Zizzo, M. et al. Glomus Tumor of the Stomach: GI Image. J Gastrointest Surg 21, 1099–1101 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11605-016-3321-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11605-016-3321-x