IMT was once regarded as a benign reactive tumour-like hyperplasia with spindle fibroblasts and myofibroblasts undergoing hyperplasia, accompanied by fibroblast infiltration as the main pathological feature [
5]. Tumours of this pathologic morphology were first identified in the CBD by Haith et al. [
6] in 1964 and first described in detail in the lungs by Bahadori et al. [
7] in 1973; IMTs were subsequently reported in various organs [
8,
9]. Due to histological particularities, these tumours have had many different names in the literature, such as inflammatory pseudotumours, plasma cell granulomas and plasma cell pseudotumours. With deeper understanding and research, the World Health Organization (WHO) (2002) eventually classified these soft tissue tumours as IMTs, namely, borderline tumours with occasional metastasis [
10]. IMTs in the CBD are extremely rare, with only 13 previously reported cases in addition to our present case (Table
1). IMTs seem to be more common in middle-aged women; the male-to-female ratio is 2:5, and the age range of IMT patients is 6 to 71 years (average, 46.5 years). The main clinical manifestations are jaundice without other associated symptoms, but a few patients also show abdominal pain, emaciation and fever [
11,
12,
21]. Biliary bleeding rarely occurs [
17]. The patient in the present case was a 34-year-old male with jaundice as the predominant clinical manifestation, similar to the 13 previously reported cases. The levels of tumour markers are usually normal; however, our patient had a slightly elevated CA199 level. CA199 may be an effective tumour marker for the diagnosis of cholangiocarcinoma and monitoring the efficacy of treatment [
22]. Therefore, cholangiocarcinoma should be considered as the primary differential diagnosis before surgery. Compared with the 13 previously reported cases, the reason for the elevated CA199 level in this case was unclear; however, due to the small number of reported IMT cases at present, the possibility of CA199 being related to IMT of the CBD cannot be excluded. Liver function examination revealed an elevated bilirubin level but normal or only slightly abnormal ALT and AST levels. ALT and AST levels were significantly abnormal in only one patient, reported by Fukushima et al. [
13]. However, the bilirubin level was also elevated in the present case. In relation to the radiological findings of this entity, a common, narrow CBD is usually observed, but distinguishing it from cholangiocarcinoma is not possible; additionally, preoperative diagnosis is difficult. The patient in the present case also showed a CBD mass with stricture on imaging. Surgery remains the preferred treatment regimen. Interestingly, Lopez-Tomassetti et al. [
18] reported local recurrence 4 years after choledochal IMT resection but chose corticosteroid treatment; complete tumour remission was reported 3 months after treatment, and 6 months after continued dose maintenance therapy, the patients remained well, with liver function markers in the normal range. This treatment approach represents a feasible secondary option for patients clinically unable to undergo surgery. Of the patient’s follow-up, the duration of follow-up ranged from 6 weeks to 19 years, and three have been reported to have experienced recurrence and distant metastases [
12,
14,
18]. Our patient was followed up for 3 years, and he is currently asymptomatic and without recurrence. Walsh et al. [
14] reported a 19-year follow-up of a patient who exhibited distant metastases occurring mainly in the lungs [
12,
23], which is also the most common primary site of IMTs. Therefore, IMTs of the CBD are capable of recurrence and distant metastasis. Given the rarity of these tumours, long-term follow-up of patients with IMTs of the CBD is scarcely reported in the literature. Extrabiliary IMTs have the potential for local infiltration, recurrence and persistent local growth. Local recurrence may occur after many years; thus, strict follow-up after surgery is required [
24]. In many cases, the behaviour of these tumours is complex and difficult to predict, especially when they occur at sites with few corresponding case reports in the literature. Although IMTs are known to be prone to local recurrence and may develop metastases, there are documented cases of both biliary and extrabiliary IMT patients without disease recurrence over prolonged follow-up periods. Arredondo Montero J. et al. [
25] reported a case of a 2-month-old girl presenting with an ileal IMT. Long-term follow-up revealed that the patient remained asymptomatic and without recurrence after 15 years.
Table 1
IMTs in the CBD have been previously reported cases in addition to present case
E. E. Haith et al. [ 6] (1964) | 6/M | Jaundice | ─ | ─ | Distal CBD | ─ | ─ | EHBD excision | 5 months/NR |
J. D. Stamatakis et al. [ 11] (1979) | 13/F | Jaundice, abdominal pain | | TB: 13.4 mg/dL | CBD, CD, CHD | 3 cm × 3 cm | ─ | PD & celecoxib | 21 months/NR |
H. Ikeda et al. [ 12] (1990) | 43/F | Fever, jaundice, significant weight loss | ─ | ─ | CHD, ProxCBD | ─ | ─ | Surgery | 7 months/lung mets. |
N. Fukushima et al. [ 13] (1997) | 58/F | Abnormal liver function on physical examination | Normal | TB: 0.7 mg/dl, AST: 159 U/l, ALT: 454 U/l | Mid-lower CBD | 2 cm × 2 cm | Vimentin (+), desmin (−), muscle-specific actin (−) and CD34 (+) | PD surgery | Not mentioned |
S. V. Walsh et al. [ 14] (1998) | 50/M | ─ | ─ | ─ | Proximal CBD | ─ | ─ | PD | 19 years/metastasis |
R. Sobesky et al. [ 15] (2003) | 51/F | Jaundice | Normal | TB: 20.8mg/dL | Distal CBD | 1.5 cm | CD34 (+), desmin (+), S-100 (+), SMA+ | PD | 2 years/NR |
Antonio Martín Malagón et al. [ 16] (2006) | 51/F | Jaundice | Normal | TB/DB: 11.3/9.3 mg/dl | Distal CBD | 0.7 cm × 0.7 cm | SMA (+), S100 (−), vimentin (+), CD45 (+), CD68 (+) | PD | 1 year/NR |
Anuradha Sekaran et al. [ 17] (2006) | 17/F | Jaundice, abdominal pain, black stool | ─ | TB/DB: 3.9/2.3 mg/dL | Distal CBD | ─ | SMA (+), S100 (+), vimentin (+) | PD | 6 weeks/NR |
E M López-Tomassetti Fernández et al. [ 18] (2006) | 55/F | Jaundice | ─ | ─ | Distal CBD | 5 cm × 5 cm | ─ | Cortical steroid therapy | 3 months/tumor regression |
Bassam Abu-Wasel et al. [ 19] (2012) | 55/M | Jaundice | Normal | TB: 20.8mg/dL | Distal CBD | 3 cm × 3 cm | ─ | PD | 14 months/NR |
K. Vasiliadis et al. [ 20] (2013) | 70/F | Jaundice | Normal | DB: 14.9 mg/dl | Mid-distal CBD | 3 cm × 3 cm | ─ | PD | 8 months/NR |
Aureen D’Cunha et al. [ 21] (2016) | 12/F | Jaundice, abdominal pain | ─ | TB/DB: 13.86 /12.1 mg/dL | Distal CBD | 4 cm × 4 cm | SMA (+), ALK (+) | PD | 9 months/NR |
Ritu Verma et al. [ 3] (2019) | 24/F | Jaundice | Normal | TB/DB: 5.8/2.9 mg/dL | Mid CBD | 10 cm × 6 cm | Desmin (+), SMA+, (CK), CD34 (−), CD117 (−), DOG1 (−), ALK1 (−) | PD | Not mentioned |
Present case | 34/M | Jaundice | CA199: 58.5 U/ml | TB/DB: 5.17/2.49 mg/dL | Mid CBD | 2 cm × 2 cm | Vimentin (+), ALK (+), SMA (+), desmin (−), CK7 (−), S-100 (−), CD34 (−), DOG1 (−), CD117 (−), Ki-67 (20%+) | PD | 3 years/NR |
Analysis of tumour pathological characteristics revealed the following: the reported tumours originated in the middle and lower segments of the CBD with an average size of approximately 3.5 cm × 3.0 cm, and the largest tumour, reported by Verma et al., was approximately 10 cm × 6 cm in size [
3]. Gross lesions are greyish-white, greyish-yellow, firm and nodular. A small number of the lesions are mucoid [
13]. On histomorphology, three types of IMT growth patterns are observed: (1) the mucus-type pattern, (2) the cellular compact spindle cell pattern, and (3) the fibre-type pattern. The dense spindle cell pattern is the most common, and the different histopathological morphologies are not associated with prognosis, which is consistent with the findings reported by Coffifi et al. [
8]. The tumour cells express SMA and vimentin; partially express desmin, CD34, CD68 and ALK; and do not express CK or S100. Abnormal ALK expression and ALK gene rearrangement represent histopathological and differential diagnosis, and ALK rearrangement is seen in approximately 50% of patients [
2]. ALK is a tyrosine kinase receptor, and ALK expression plays an important role in gene rearrangement in the development of IMT [
26]. In the present case, the tumour occurred in the middle part of the CBD, and the tumour cell growth pattern was mainly of the dense spindle cell type. The immunohistochemical expression pattern in this case is consistent with that in the previously reported case with ALK rearrangement.
All patients were subsequently diagnosed with infiltrating biliary or peribiliary pseudotumours on laparotomy. No patient was, in fact, thought to have a nonneoplastic lesion before biliary diversion. Extrahepatic biliary resection was performed in 14 patients. However, the final pathological diagnosis was IMT. IMTs of CBD are rare lesions that are often mistaken for aggressive malignancies, and although their appearance is nonspecific, a diagnosis may be made by imaging-directed core biopsy. If biopsy is performed preoperatively or intraoperatively, the trauma of surgery can be reduced.