The diagnosis and treatment of papillary cystadenoma of the esophagus by
the Endoscopy : a case report and literature review
Abstract
Papillary cystadenoma is a epithelial benign tumor of the salivary
gland, most commonly in the oral cavity, head and neck. There was no
difference in the sex distribution of patients, and the age of onset was
30-50 years old. The clinical manifestations are: slow growth local
mass, long course of disease, some can be as long as decades, most
patients have no obvious conscious symptoms, a few patients can appear
local pain or distension. However, papillary cystadenoma of the
esophagus is very rare, and few cases have been reported. We report a
case of papillary cystadenoma of the lower esophagus and its treatment
by endoscopy. The patient had no obvious complaint of discomfort.
Routine gastroscopy found submucosal protuberant lesions in the lower
segment of the esophagus (Figure 1), and endoscopic ultrasonography
suggested cystic and solid lesions originating from the muscular layer
of the esophageal mucosa, thus mesenchymal tumor was preliminarily
diagnosed (Figure 2). After the exclusion of relevant contraindications,
preoperative examinations were completed and the tumor was completely
removed by esophageal submucosal tumor excision under endoscopy (Figure
3). Postoperative pathology indicated the tumor is papillary
cystadenoma, and immunohistochemistry indicated that: CK7(+), CK(+), and
basal cells of P63 (+) (Figure 4, 5). Due to the rare case, combined
with the process of the diagnosis and treatment of this case, we
reviewed the relevant reports on the papillary cystadenoma of the
digestive tract in the past 60 years, in order to help clinicians to
improve their understanding and treatments of the papillary cystadenoma.