Atypical histologic variants of focal nodular hyperplasia have been reported and are sometimes difficult to recognize. To characterize the morphologic spectrum of focal nodular hyperplasia, we studied 305 lesions surgically resected from 168 patients. Clinicomorphologic correlations were established by statistical analyses. The patients included 150 women and 18 men (sex ratio, 8:1; median age, 38 years). One hundred twenty-eight (76.2%) patients had solitary lesions, and 40 (23.8%) had 2 to 30 lesions. All 305 lesions measured 1 mm to 19 cm in diameter. Only 49% of these lesions had one to three macroscopic scars. Histologically, 245 (80.3%) lesions were of classical form, and 60 (19.7%) lesions were nonclassical. The latter were classified as focal nodular hyperplasia of telangiectatic form (47 lesions), of mixed hyperplastic and adenomatous form (five lesions), and with atypia of large cell type (eight lesions). Several benign or malignant tumors were found in association with these lesions. This large retrospective series of focal nodular hyperplasia shows the relative incidence of its classical and nonclassical forms. The absence of a central scar could explain the difficult preoperative diagnosis of some of the cases. The morphologic diagnostic criteria in this study require further prospective evaluation.
Portal hypertension has been regarded as an uncommon and late complication of primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). 24 patients with PBC were investigated for portal hypertension. Esophageal varices were present in 20, 50, and 90 % of the patients 1, 3, and 9 years, respectively, after the onset of pruritus and/or jaundice. Portal hypertension was responsible for gastrointestinal bleedings in 11 patients; bleeding was the first clinical manifestation of PBC in two of them. Wedged hepatic venous pressure was increased in all the patients with portal hypertension whether regenerative nodules were present or absent. Portacaval shunt was performed in five patients and was well tolerated in three of them. It is concluded that (a) portal hypertension is common in PBC; (b) the intrahepatic block is of the so-called postsinusoidal type, even in patients without regenerative nodules; (c) gastrointestinal bleeding due to portal hypertension occurs in about half of the patients and may be the first manifestation of PBC; (d) portacaval shunt seems to be indicated when gastrointestinal bleeding occurs in earlier stage of the disease.