0521779407-19 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:21
Small Bowel Tumors 1357
■Malignant neoplasms:
➣Adenocarcinoma
accounts for 25–50% of small bowel malignancies
incidence decreases from duodenum to jejunum
60% periampullary
Crohn’s disease, predominantly involves ileum
tendency to metastasize early to regional lymph nodes
■Carcinoid tumors
➣see chapter on carcinoid tumor
■Lymphoma
➣small bowel often involved (most common extranodal site)
➣mostly non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas
➣all types, including B-cell, large cell, immunoblastic, T-cell, inter-
mediate or high grade
➣most common in the ileum
➣typical symptoms are fatigue, weight loss, pain
■Sarcomas
➣rare (1% of small bowel malignancies)
➣most common in jejunum, ileum, and Meckel’s diverticula most
common type is leiomyosarcoma
➣symptoms include obstruction, bleeding, or pain
➣criteria for malignancy: number of mitoses, nuclear atypia, pres-
ence of necrosis, cellularity
➣local or hematogenous spread
■Metastatic tumors
➣predominantly melanoma; also breast, lung, kidney, colon, cer-
vical, ovarian
➣may cause symptoms of obstruction, bleeding and pain
■Neuroendocrine tumors
➣gastrinoma, somatostatinoma, schwannoma, paraganglionoma
➣present with hormone-specific symptoms or as a mass le-
sion
tests
Basic Studies: Blood
■Early disease: usually normal
■Advanced disease: variable by tumor; microcytic anemia with GI
bleeding; elevated alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin with biliary
obstruction; elevated CEA with metastatic adenocarcinoma; ele-
vated beta- 2 -microglobulin, LDH, or monoclonal gammopathy with
lymphoma