[A case of pancreatic cancer with clusters of invasive micropapillary carcinoma markedly reduced by chemotherapy].

A man in his 60s was hospitalized with multiple cerebral infarctions and referred for Trousseau's syndrome. Computerized tomography confirmed a 60-mm mass in the pancreatic head and swollen lymph nodes around the abdominal aorta. Fine needle aspiration cytology of the pancreatic lesion and laparoscopic para-aortic lymph node biopsy revealed adenocarcinoma, including clusters of invasive micropapillary carcinoma (IMPC). Chemotherapy (gemcitabine and nab-paclitaxel) markedly decreased the primary and metastatic lesions, and no recurrence was clinically detected 24 months later. To the best of our knowledge, reports of pancreatic IMPCs are rare. Our case was the seventeenth case of pancreatic cancer with IMPC. In this case, chemotherapy was markedly effective.