CASE 9513 Published on 11.08.2011

CT diagnosis of xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis

Section

Abdominal imaging

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

Ankur Arora1, Hitender Garg2, Amar Mukund1, Archana Rastogi3, Chaggan Bihari3

Department of Radiodiagnosis1, Hepatology2, and Pathology3
Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences

D-1 Vasant Kunj 110070 New Delhi, India;
Email:aroradrankur@yahoo.com
Patient

40 years, female

Categories
Area of Interest Abdomen ; Imaging Technique CT
Clinical History
A 40-year-old febrile lady presented with worsening right upper abdominal pain of 7-8 days duration. Clinical examination revealed tender palpable lump in the right upper quadrant. Haematological examination revealed leukocytosis (12, 600 cells) with mildly elevated bilirubin (1.6 mg/dl).
Imaging Findings
Contrast enhanced CT abdomen revealed oedematous thickening of the gall bladder wall with associated pericholecystic fat stranding suggesting inflamed gall bladder wall. Multifocal hypoattenuating non-enhancing intramural areas were present in the thickened walls of the gall bladder. Some were ill-defined nodular in morphology, while lower cuts revealed a subtly intramural hypoattenuating band. The imaging findings led to the suspicion of xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis. MR imaging and MRCP were also performed which revealed multiple intraluminal calculi and sludge within the gall bladder. The wall was thickened and oedematous with a thin sliver of pericholecystic fluid. Axial T1-weighted fat suppressed images revealed subtle hypoattenuating nodules within the gall bladder wall. On MRCP no evidence of choledocholithiasis or biliary dilatation was seen. The patient was taken up for open cholecystectomy; and intra-operatively dense adhesions were encountered in the gall bladder fossa. Post operative histopathology confirmed xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis. The specimen showed no malignant cells.
Discussion
Xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis (XGC) is an uncommon form of chronic granulomatous cholecystitis characterised by the accumulation of lipid-laden macrophages in the gallbladder wall together with acute and chronic inflammatory cells. Macroscopically, the thickened gall bladder wall exhibits yellowish psudo-tumoural masses which are rich in foamy histiocytes and xanthoma cells. XGC is relatively more frequently seen in middle aged women and its relation to cholelithiasis is high, from 80-90%. The clinical presentation of XGC is variable, however, patients frequently present with acute cholecystitis or obstructive jaundice. Adhesions to the surrounding structures are frequently seen often making cholecystectomy challenging. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is often unsuccessful and has a high conversion rate to open cholecystectomy. The exuberant xanthogranulomatous inflammation can contiguously extend on to the adjacent structures, such as duodenum, liver, colon and stomach, leading to perforation, abscess and fistula formation. XGC with marked gallbladder thickening and dense local adhesions has been frequently misdiagnosed both intra-operatively as well as pre-operatively (on imaging) as having carcinoma of the gallbladder and treated with uncalled-for extensive excision. However, recent reports have suggested certain distinguishing imaging findings suggesting an apt diagnosis of XGC on pre-operative cross sectional imaging.

CT features of diffusely thickened gallbladder wall exhibiting the enhanced continuous mucosal line (representing preserved mucosal layer in XGC) or intramural hypoattenuating nodules together with gallstones in a patient with chronic gallbladder disease, have been considered highly suggestive of XGC [1, 3, 4]. On CT, intramural low-attenuation band or nodules histopathologically correspond to foamy macrophages and inflammatory cells or necrosis and/or abscess [1]. A continuous luminal surface enhancement of gallbladder wall represents preservation of the epithelial layer in XGC as opposed to the disrupted mucosa of GB carcinoma [1]. Chang BJ et al. have recently evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of MDCT for differentiating XGC from wall thickening types of early-stage GB cancer which look like XGC [2]. They found that early GB wall enhancement was more common in GB cancer than XGC; probably suggesting a differential enhancement pattern between inflammatory lesion and cancer. They proposed that it could possibly relate to angiogenesis which is central to tumour growth. Although inflammation also increases local blood flow than normal condition, angiogenesis is lacking in inflammation, which could explain why early perfusion is less than in cancer. This differential enhancement pattern on MDCT, however, needs more studies for validation [2].
Differential Diagnosis List
Xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis
Acute gangrenous cholecystitis
Gall bladder malignancy
Final Diagnosis
Xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis
Case information
URL: https://www.eurorad.org/case/9513
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.9513
ISSN: 1563-4086