An Unusual Case Of Incidental Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumor Presenting With Main Pancreatic Duct Cystic Dilatation.

Abstract

Introduction: Pancreatic lesions have varied morphology and presentation, making their diagnosis challenging. The lesions may be asymptomatic incidentalomas on abdominal imaging for other conditions, symptomatic, producing specific hormone effects or causing local effects. Case: We report a 35-year-old woman with recurrent abdominal pain confirmed gastroesophageal reflux disease. Initial CT imaging reported findings of a pancreatic pseudocysts. A careful review of the imaging showed cystic dilatation of the main pancreatic duct mimicking a main pancreatic duct intra-ductal papillary mucinous neoplasm. At surgery, a small nodule palpated in the pancreatic head with sacculation in the body and tail. A histopathological review showed a pancreatic neuroendocrine tumour blocking the main pancreatic duct at the neck causing downstream dilatation and sacculation. This case highlights the difficulty of diagnosing small asymptomatic pancreatic tumours especially with limited range of imaging modalities while increasing awareness of these conditions to improve our ability to manage them effectively.

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Research Article

Citation

Essoun, S., Adu-Aryee, N. A., Obaka, H. E., Seshie, B., Dey, D., & Naporo, S. (2024). An unusual case of incidental pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor presenting with main pancreatic duct cystic dilatation. Oxford Medical Case Reports, 2024(9), omae104.

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