Acinar Cell Pancreatic Carcinoma: a Rare Case of Pancreatic Tumor and Short Review of Literature

Acinar


INTRODUCTION
Pancreatic cancers can be classified into two major categories, epithelial and nonepithelial.3] PACC is a primarily malignant neoplasia that belongs to the pancreatic adenocarcinoma family; however, documentation of differentiation from the norm is rare.
Despite acinar cells constituting the majority of pancreas' mass, PACCs are disproportionately rare, with about one per cent of pancreatic tumors being of this type.Patients are primarily male, with a male-to-female ratio of 2-3.6:1, about the age of 60, with the median age being 58, whereas race does not seem to play a role.These tumors are usually large, with a mean size of 10 cm at the time of detection, soft, round, and well defined; they have a yellow to brown color and are most frequently located in the head of the pancreas, with a tendency to infiltrate adjacent tissues.Sometimes lesions may even be enclosed in a fibrous capsule, which leads to displacement of near structures. [2,3]mmunohistochemistry is useful to diagnose those kinds of tumors, mainly because of the enzyme-producing cells.Labelling for trypsin, chymotrypsin and lipase are usually positive, whereas amylase is not so often detectable.[3] Despite affecting more frequently the head of the pancreas, icterus due to bile obstruction is rare, a key difference with ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. [1,2]]5] Regarding the prognosis of the disease, it is poor as PACC is a malignant and aggressive cancer.Survival is determined mainly by the stage of the cancer and the presence or not of metastases, which most often occur in regional lymph nodes and the liver. [1,2]The 5-year survival is estimated under 10%, but even patients with metastasized cancer commonly show a survival of two-three years.
Like other neoplasias, PACC is characterized by a set of genetic mutations that are found in the neoplastic cells' genome.5] Taking into account PACC's special macroscopic, microscopic, immunohistochemical and genetic features, diagnosis is based on laboratory examinations, imaging techniques and biopsy. [1,2]More specifically, the main finding of biochemical examinations is elevated serum lipase values when lipase hypersecretion syndrome is present, whereas biomarker levels are typically normal.Computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging are the preferred imaging methods showing demarked, homoge-nous, and round masses in the pancreas parenchyma, with cystic areas being sometimes present. [1,2]Lastly, biopsy is done using ultrasound guide fine needle aspiration (FNA) method, which usually shows cells with acinar differentiation, often without their cytoplasm which is characterized by high fragility. [1,2]egarding treatment, surgical excision is almost always used but with high rates of recurrence of up to 70%, 25% of which are distant metastases.Surgical operation on metastases is proven to ameliorate survival.Benefits of radio and chemotherapy are still debatable and specific treatment schemes have yet to be developed. [1,2]erein, we present a case of a female patient with pancreas cancer, which was surgically removed, and later biopsy showed its acinar characteristics.

CASE PRESENTATION
A 51-year-old female patient presented to the hospital due to painless obstructive icterus, accompanied by severe itching.The patient reported some episodes of diffuse abdominal pain accompanied by vomiting the month before she came to the hospital.Biochemical examination results showed elevated alkaline phosphatase (214 U/L) and elevated bilirubin (13.8 mg/dL), with predominance of direct bilirubin (9.4 mg/ dL).In a previous hospitalization, ultrasound imaging of the upper abdomen showed a nonhomogeneous hypoechoic mass in the head of the pancreas, mild thickening of the gallbladder's and intrahepatic bile ducts' walls, and a dilated common bile duct, whereas a later MRI-magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) confirmed the ultrasound's results (Fig. 1).During the present hospitalization, a CT-scan of the upper abdomen was performed showing also a protruding mass in the head of the pancreas, and specifically in the uncinate process of the pancreas.The mass seemed to be extending behind the upper mesenteric blood vessels.Dilation of the intrahepatic and extrahepatic biliary tree, with obstruction of the common bile duct was once again found.
Surgical treatment of the patient was decided, and she underwent Whipple surgery along with en bloc pancreatectomy and splenectomy due to the soft texture of the pancreas.A small portion of the stomach was also removed.The removed tissue was sent for macroscopic and microscopic histological examination.
A well-defined grayish neoplasia was found in the head of the pancreas, measuring 4.5×4×3.5 cm and having a lobular appearance.The mass was deemed a low-differentiated adenocarcinoma which showed regional acinar type differentiation and immunohistochemistry, being AE1/AE3+, Cam 5.2+, CK7+, CK19+, α1-ACT+, and regionally BCL-10+.Synaptophysin, S100, and Vim biomarkers were negative.Cells presented with a singular round shaped nucleus with apparent nucleoli and plenty of granular cytoplasm and showed lobular and more rarely tubular architecture.The tumor had a lackluster stroma, and no neuroendocrine component was found.The neoplasia showed a tendency for infiltration of the common bile duct, the mesenteric blood vessels, the peripancreatic fat, and two of the 11 lymph nodes that were removed were found to be infiltrated by cancerous cells.

Other than the main mass, the rest of the pancreas parenchyma showed regions of low-grade PanIN and regions of enzymatic necrosis. All of the aforementioned findings indicate that it was a case of PACC, a special type of adenocarcinoma developing from the cells of that produce pancreatic enzymes.
Adding to the surgery, on the fifth postoperative day, an endocrinologic assessment was performed for future regulation due to the excision of the pancreas, which included insulin and pancreatic enzyme substitution and appropriate vaccination due to the splenectomy that was also performed.

DISCUSSION
When considering this particular case several points of interest can be distinguished.The size of the lesion was quite small at 4.5×4×3.5 cm when the median size during diagnosis was about 10 cm, signifying the early diagnosis that was achieved. [2,3]Additionally, the patient presenting with icterus as the main symptom of this clinical entity is interesting, as such a presentation is observed in about 12% of the cases. [2]The architecture that the cells adopted is intriguing, as it combined the common acinar pattern with the more rare tubular pattern of development. [2]Immunohistochemically, the presented case abides by the most common biomarkers, showing AE1/AE3 and Cam 5.2 positivity, but the CK7 and CK19 positivity that is documented is different from the CK8 and CK18 results that are characteristic of PACC.
Despite it being such a rare clinical entity, there is adequate coverage of PACC in the literature, with a variety of cases having been presented.Kimura et al. and Zundler et al. both describe their separate cases of PACC, each with intriguing characteristics. [7,8]Wang et al., over the span of 10 years, compared 19 cases of PACC with 19 cases of ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas.These cases presented interesting differences but also important similarities indicative of the presentation of PACC.All the patients were treated, if possible, surgically, and an overall comparison of the two pathologies indicated a better prognosis for DAC. [9]ll things considered, PACC is a rare disease that physicians must take into account when making a differential diagnosis because it is not as obvious how it differs from other pancreatic neoplastic pathologies.This case's unique characteristics highlight the variability of PACC, regarding prevalence, clinical presentation, and immunohistochemistry, which further incommodes a correct diagnosis.Therefore, the presence or absence of the disease, the main parameter that is going to determine the patient's well-being due to PACC's bad prognosis, should be justified by any means necessary.

CONCLUSION
To conclude, pancreatic acinar cell carcinoma can be considered a rare subtype of adenocarcinoma of the pancreas, usually occurring in the head of the pancreas, and presenting itself with nonspecific symptoms.It is also possible for it to appear in other parts of the pancreas as in other organs of the abdomen.In our case, a 51-year-old female patient, presenting with painless icterus, had a mass in the head of the pancreas which was later deduced to be PACC.After the surgery, the patient was regulated regarding her endocrine system and her immune system.Folia Medica I 2024 I Vol.66 I No. 3

Figure 1 .
Figure 1. A. Double duct sign with beak-like appearance of the distal bile duct (red arrow); B. MRCP revealed tumor at the head of the pancreas with slight enhancement in arterial phase and persistent enhancement in portal phase (black arrow).