The tumor's nonspecific clinical presentation, including abdominal pain, mass, or fever, combined with the lack of characteristic laboratory markers (e.g., normal AFP, occasional mild elevations in CA19–9 or CA125) and imaging findings (e.g., cystic-solid masses with necrosis on CT/MRI), contribute to a high preoperative misdiagnosis rate [[3], [4], [5]]. This evidence concerns the gene AFP and neoplasm.