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    <title>IMC Journal of Medical Science</title>
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    <description>Ibrahim Medical College Journal of Medical Science</description>

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                <title><![CDATA[HEPATOBLASTOMA AS A RARE CAUSE OF PRECOCIOUS PUBERTY]]></title>

                                    <author><![CDATA[Md. Abu Taher]]></author>
                                    <author><![CDATA[AHM Abdul Fattah]]></author>
                                    <author><![CDATA[Dilruba Khandker]]></author>
                                    <author><![CDATA[Abu Saleh Mohiuddin]]></author>
                                    <author><![CDATA[Md. Mahfuzar Rahman]]></author>
                                    <author><![CDATA[AKSM Shahidul Islam]]></author>
                                    <author><![CDATA[Akhtar Uddin Ahmed]]></author>
                
                <link data-url="https://imcjms.com/registration/journal_full_text/103">
    https://imcjms.com/registration/journal_full_text/103
</link>
                <pubDate>Thu, 06 Oct 2016 14:16:39 +0000</pubDate>
                <category><![CDATA[Clinical Case Report]]></category>
                <comments><![CDATA[Ibrahim Med. Coll. J. 2007; 1(2): 28-32]]></comments>
                <description>A
15-month old boy presented with an abdominal swelling and early development of
secondary sexual characteristics for the last 5 months. The mass was initially
suspected to be of adrenal origin. Radiological and biochemical (hormonal)
findings diagnosed the case to be a hepatoblastoma later confirmed by
histopathological examination. Hepatoblastoma, an aggressive primary liver
tumor, is a rare form of childhood malignancy and a rare cause of precocious
puberty compared to the more common adrenal causes including congenital adrenal
hyperplasia, adrenal tumors and the testicular tumors. Thus, when virilization
occurs postnatally in boys, or girls presenting with ambiguous genitalia at
birth, a virilizing adrenocortical tumor is usually given the first consideration
(according to its frequency of incidence), followed by CNS causes. Rarely does
one think of the other possibilities. This report describes the typical
presentations and clinical features of hepatoblastoma highlighting its usual
radiological features.
Key Words: Hepatoblastoma, precocious puberty, imaging features.
&amp;nbsp;
Precocious puberty is said to occur when
secondary sexual characteristics develop in girls less than 8 years of age and
boys before 9 years of age. In boys, 25-75% are found to have an underlying
organic cause advocating the need for further investigations including CT &amp;amp;
MRI of the abdomen and brain. Precocious puberty in them may be of a) true /
central type which is gonadotropin dependent, due to the premature activation
of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis (ie. CNS cause). These causes include
hamartoma of the tuber cinereum (most common), midline mass lesions in and
around the hypothalamus (including the pituitary), and the various causes of
raised intracranial pressure. On the other hand, b) incomplete /
pseudo-precocious puberty is due to the autonomous secretion of sex steroids
(i.e. androgens) or hCG. Its causes include congenital adrenal hyperplasia
(CAH, due to deficiency of 21- &amp;amp; 11-b hydroxylase in 95% and 5% cases respectively), adrenal tumors
(adenoma-30%, carcinoma-60%), and testicular tumors. The rarer causes of
precocious puberty in boys are the hCG-secreting tumors (eg. hepatoblastoma,
teratoma, germinoma of the pineal gland) and the McCune-Albright Syndrome.
The present case
Fig-1: A
15 months old boy with precocious puberty showing in (a) a mature looking face
with fine moustache, in (b) distended abdomen and (c) a mass producing a
visible bulge in the right hypochondrium.
Hormonal
assay revealed raised S.testosterone level- 3.15 ng/ml (normal post pubertal
level is 3.4–14.0 ng/ml, pre pubertal level being barely recordable), S.
Cortisol &amp;amp; DHEAS were within normal limits. The patient also had very high
S. AFP (alpha-feto protein)- 27900ng/dl (normal level is 0.6-6.0ng/dl) and high
b-hCG level-123.94mU/ml (normal is&amp;lt;7mU/ml).
Radiological findings included
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 
&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;
d)&amp;nbsp; CT-Abdomen and Lower Chest- A huge heterogeneous
mass with scattered flecks of calcifications was found occupying almost the
whole of the right lobe of the liver. On post contrast CT it showed
heterogeneous enhancement with intervening lakes of hypodense areas possibly
due to necrosis. The interface between the mass and skin and the diaphragm
could not be well delineated and a spicule could be traced direct up through
the diaphragm into the right lung field in the sagittal reconstructed view.
Chest cuts also revealed numerous metastatic nodules in both lung fields.
(Fig-4).
Fig-4: CT abdomen and lower
chest: (a) CE-CT shows a heterogeneous mass occupying almost the whole of the
right lobe of the liver with flecks of calcifications. (b) CE-CT shows
heterogeneous enhancement of the lesion with intervening hypodensities denoting
lakes of necrosis. (c) CE-CT- Involvement of anterior abdominal wall by the
lesion and right kidney is separate. (d) and (e) CT lower chest shows distinct
nodules indicative of pulmonary metastasis in both lungs. (f) Sagittal
reconstruction of CE-CT delineates the vertical extension of the mass lesion
with upward protrusion through the diaphragm.
In conformity with these typical
imaging features, the impression was that it was a hepatoblastoma with probable
extension into the anterolateral abdominal wall and lung metastasis.
&amp;nbsp;
In
children, most hepatic neoplasms are malignant1. The hepatoblastoma (HB) is an
extremely rare, highly aggressive primary liver tumor of childhood. Among the
childhood hepatic neoplasms it is the most common one -54%, followed by HCC
–35% and others –11%2. It is a tumor of embryonal hepatocytes or mesenchymal cells,
histologically classified into a) epithelial and b) mixed varieties- which is
useful for prognosis3,4. It forms 0.2-5.8% of all primary pediatric malignancies5. The
majority appear within the first 3 years of life (rarely thereafter)1. They are
more frequent in boys and occur most often in the right lobe of the liver (60%)6.
Regarding the pathophysiology of
the precocious pseudo-puberty in hepatoblastoma - the primitive hepatoblastoma
cells secrete hCG which acts on LH-receptor of the testes, inducing them to
release increased amounts of testosterone which results in sexual precocity in
these patients 7-11 (Fig-5).
&amp;nbsp;
Common
sites of metastasis include the lungs (most common, and often present- in
10-20% at presentation), brain, bone, bone marrow, ovary, orbit6.
&amp;nbsp;
Typically,
ultrasonography (USG) is the initial imaging evaluation in these children. The
usual sonographic and CT findings are those that were found in our patient.
Because these lesions can invade vascular structures such as the portal and
hepatic veins, careful assessment of these structures by color flow Doppler is
essential. One literature describes the prenatal diagnosis of a case at 37
weeks gestational age by USG13.
However, it is not an adequate method of image staging of the neoplasm. CT is
done for staging to assess the feasibility of surgery both before and after
chemotherapy. One group1&amp;nbsp;states that to assess the liver, CT is to be
done by using biphasic (hepatic arterial and portal venous) dynamic
contrast-enhanced spiral CT, followed by standard axial CT imaging of the
remainder of the abdomen and chest. As in USG, thrombus may be found in the
hepatic vein, portal vein and IVC. Metastases to bone and brain are rare, and
therefore imaging is advised only if clinical signs and symptoms warrant doing
so1.
&amp;nbsp;
Precocious pseudo
puberty due to hepatoblastoma is extremely rare. A high index of suspicion is
necessary on the part of the radiologists and endocrinologists by excluding
usual causes like diseases of the adrenocortico-hypothalamo-pituitary axis.
When a boy of 1-3 years presents with a mass in the right upper abdomen with
typical physical and radiological features and hormonal assay findings, the
possibility of this rare tumor should be kept in mind. Early diagnosis of
hepatoblastoma is indispensible due to its highly aggressive nature.
Appropriate and timely surgical and oncological interventions are worthwhile
only in the early stages of the disease, which could lead to substantial
reduction in the mortality and morbidity of the patient. Radiology and imaging
plays a key role in the diagnosis adjuvant to biochemical parameters.
Acknowledgement
&amp;nbsp;
1. &amp;nbsp;Pollock AN, Towbin RB, Charron M, and Meza MP. Imaging in
Pediatric Endocrine Disorders. Sperling MA ed. In Pediatric Endocrinology, 2nd&amp;nbsp;edn. Saunders:
Philadelphia 2002: 567-569, 747-749.
3.&amp;nbsp;McTavish JD, Ros PR. Hepatic Mass Lesions. Haaga JR, Lanzieri
CF, and Gilkeson RC eds. In Computed Tomography and Magnetic Resonance Imaging
of the Whole Body, 4th edn. Mosby: St. Louis, Missouri 2003: 1293 – 1294.
5.&amp;nbsp;Thomas KE and Owens CM. The Paediatric Abdomen. Sutton D ed. In
Textbook of Radiology and Imaging, 7th edn. Churchill Livingstone: Edinburgh 2003: 878 – 879.
7.&amp;nbsp;Navarro C, Corretger JM, Sancho A, Rovira J, Morales L.
Paraneoplastic precocious puberty: Report of a new case with hepatoblastoma and
review of the literature. Cancer 1985; 56: 1725-1729.
9.&amp;nbsp;Nakagawara A, Ikeda K, Tsuneyoshi M, Daimaru Y, Enjoji M,
Watanabe I et al. Hepatoblastoma producing both alpha-fetoprotein and
human chorionic gonadotropin: Clinicopathologic analysis of four cases and a
review of the literature. Cancer 1985; 56: 1636-1642.
11.&amp;nbsp;Murthy AS, Vawter GF, Lee AB, Jockin H, Filler RM. Hormonal
bioassay of gonadotropin-producing hepatoblastoma. Arch Pathol Lab Med
1980; 104: 513-517.
13.&amp;nbsp;Aviram R, Cohen IJ, Kornreich L, Braslavski D, Meizner I. Prenatal
imaging of fetal hepatoblastoma. J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med 2005; 17:
157-159.
15.&amp;nbsp;Czauderna P, Otte JB, Aronson DC, Gauthier F, Mackinlay G, Roebuck
D et al. Childhood Liver Tumor Strategy Group of the International
Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOPEL): Guidelines for surgical treatment of
hepatoblastoma in the modern era- recommendations from the SIOPEL. Eur J
Cancer 2005; 41: 1031-1036.
17.&amp;nbsp;Abbasoglu L, Gun F, Tansu Salman F, Relik A,
Saraq F, Unuvar A et al. Hepatoblastoma in children. Acta Chir Belg
2004; 104: 318-321. </description>

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