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Published byLynne Allison Modified over 9 years ago
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Angiosarcoma 賴名耀 宗天一 高雄榮總 皮膚科
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Angiosarcoma Case Report An 85-year-old male suffered from asymptomatic to mildly painful bruise-like skin eruption with oozing over left forehead for 3 months. The lesion bled easily and progressed quickly from 2.5cm to 5.0cm in diameter. Several small purple satellite lesions around the main lesion were noted. There was no fever, no chills and no neck LAP.
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Histopathology First biopsy: Second biopsy (4 weeks later from the first one): Special stain: CD34 (+), Factor VIII (-), S-100 (-) Image Study Chest X ray Whole body bone scan Abdominal Sonography Skull X ray
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Management Radiotherapy: 6 MeV x 7000cGy Post-irradiation ulceration and pain over forehead and left side of face. Surgical debridement and STSG for the post- irradiation ulceration (one month after radiotherapy). Surgical intervention and chemotherapy were not considered because of old age. Follow-up Two new lesions over left lower cheek and chin were noted after STSG was done for 1 month.
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Discussion
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Angiosarcoma (AS) A rare malignant vascular tumor (1-4% of all sarcoma). The nomenclature: Angiosarcoma, hemangiosarcoma, malignant hemangio- endothelioma, lymphangiosarcoma. Angiosarcoma, hemangiosarcoma, malignant hemangio- endothelioma, lymphangiosarcoma. Classification Deep soft tissue tumor Cutaneous/subcutaneous tumor (60%) Cutaneous AS of face and scalp (most common) Cutaneous AS associated with lymphedema Post-irradiation AS Primary AS of the breast
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Cutaneous Angiosarcoma of the Face and Scalp Less than 0.1% of all head and neck cancers. The average age of onset: between 65-80 years. Sex: Male : Female = 2:1 Most common site of AS: scalp, then upper face. Pathogenesis of AS: unknown. Predisposing factors: Previous irradiation. Malignant change with preexisting benign lesions. Viral infection. Foreign bodies reaction.
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Clinical Manifestation Most common: asymptomatic bruise-like patches, plaques or nodules with ill-defined margins and satellite lesions. Three clinical patterns (Darryl et al, 1979) : Nodular type Superficial spreading type Ulcerating type Median duration before diagnosis (Aust et al, 1997) : 5 months Median size: 7.0 cm
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Histopathology The tumor shows varied differentiation (angiomatous, spindle cell and undifferentiated patterns), and most tumors are composed of various proportions of each patterns. In well-differentiated areas: Irregular anastomosing vascular channels were lined by a single layer of somewhat enlarged endothelial cells permeating between collagen bundles. Characteristic feature: “dissection of collagen”. Vascular lumens are generally bloodless and may contain free-lying shed malignant cells.
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Histopathology In less well-differentiated areas: Endothelial cells increase in size and number, forming intraluminal papillary projections. In poorly differentiated areas: Solid sheets of large pleomorphic cells with little or no evidence of luminal differentiation, resemble metastatic carcinoma or melanoma. In other areas: Spindle cell, epithelioid cell, interstitial hemorrhage, and widely dilated blood-filled spaces.
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Immunohistochemistry Factor VIII and UEA-I: less value for diagnosis. CD34 and CD31: more reliable as sensitive markers. Differential Diagnosis In well-differentiated angiosarcomas: D/D from early macular lesions of Kaposi’s sarcoma, benign lymphangioendothelioma and intravascular papillary endothelial hyperplasia. In poorly differentiated angiosarcomas: D/D from adenoid squamous carcinoma with intra- tumor hemorrhage.
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Management Recommendation: Surgical wide excision combined with adjuvant radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy. In the unresectable cases: palliative radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy. Other treatment modalities: CO 2 laser Mohs surgery Immunotherapy Intra-arterial doxorubicin HCl infusion
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Prognosis High local recurrence rate: 33% ~ 90%. Highest rate of lymph node metastases of all soft tissue sarcoma of the head and neck: 13%. Common metastatic sites: Cervical lymph node, lung, liver and spleen. Mean survival time: 10 ~ 24 months. 5-year survival rate: 12% ~ 33%. Independent prognostic factor: tumor size (5 cm), mode of treatment, mitotic counts.
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Thanks
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