Castleman disease of the pancreas mimicking pancreatic malignancy on <sup>68</sup>Ga-DOTATATE and <sup>18</sup>F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography: A case report
Sheng-Lu Liu, Ming Luo, Hao-Xian Gou, Xiaoli Yang, Kai He
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Castleman disease is an uncommon nonclonal lymphoproliferative disorder, which frequently mimics both benign and malignant abnormalities in several regions. Depending on the number of lymph nodes or regions involved, Castleman disease (CD) varies in diagnosis, treatment and prognosis. It rarely occurs in the pancreas alone without any distinct clinical feature and tends to be confused with pancreatic paraganglioma (PGL), neuroendocrine tumors (NETs), and primary tumors, thus impeding proper diagnosis and treatment. CASE SUMMARY: Ga-DOTATATE PET/CT, suggesting no distant metastases and subdiagnoses such as pancreatic PGL, NET, or primary tumor. Intraoperative pathology suggested lymphatic hyperplasia, and only simple tumor resection was performed. The patient was diagnosed with the hyaline vascular variant of CD, which was confirmed by postoperative immunohistochemistry. The patient was discharged successfully, and no recurrence was observed on regular review. CONCLUSION: High glucose uptake and slightly elevated SSTR expression are potentially new diagnostic features of CD of the pancreas.