De Chiara Annarosaria, De Rosa Vincenzo, Lastoria Secondo, Franco Renato, Botti Gerardo, Iaffaioli Vincenzo Rosario, Apice Gaetano
UOC Pathology, Istituto dei Tumori G. Pascale, Naples, Italy.
Front Biosci. 2006 Jan 1;11:498-501. doi: 10.2741/1813.
We report a case of a primary malignant GIST of the liver metastatic to the lung in a 37 years-old man. The liver tumor showed histological feature of a GIST and expressed vimentin, and diffusely exhibited CD117. One year after the resection of the liver mass, the patient developed multiple small lung metastases which completely disappeared with STI-571 (imatinib mesylate--Gleevec) therapy. C.T. or PET did not show any mass in the abdomen. These findings suggest that the liver mass was a primary rather than a metastatic tumour. They also support the hypothesis that GIST could originate from undifferentiated mesenchymal cells capable to differentiate toward a pacemaker cell phenotype, which are present in sites other than the G.I. tract.