| Literature DB >> 21139968 |
Yohei Funakoshi, Toru Mukohara, Tomoko Kataoka, Hideo Tomioka, Naoko Chayahara, Yutaka Fujiwara, Naomi Kiyota, Tomonori Shirasaka, Takanori Oka, Kenji Okada, Yutaka Okita, Shigeo Hara, Tomoo Itoh, Soichi Fumita, Kazuhiko Nakagawa, Hironobu Minami.
Abstract
Extension of metastatic lung tumors into the left atrium via pulmonary veins is rare. Here, we report the first case of Ewing sarcoma exhibiting such extension. A 31-year-old man with pulmonary metastasis from Ewing sarcoma presented with a mass in the left lung, extending to the left atrium through the left inferior pulmonary vein. As the patient was considered to be at risk of tumor embolism, the mass was excised surgically.Entities:
Keywords: Ewing sarcoma; left atrial tumor extension; lung metastasis; tumor invasion of pulmonary veins
Year: 2010 PMID: 21139968 PMCID: PMC2994530 DOI: 10.4081/rt.2010.e53
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rare Tumors ISSN: 2036-3605
Figure 1(A) Axial chest computed tomography scan. A mass can be seen moving toward the left atrium via the pulmonary vein (arrow). (B) Coronal F-18 FDG PET images. The arrow indicates uptake at the site of the mass.
Figure 2View from surgical window of left atrium. The blue triangles indicate the surgical section of the left atrium, while the white triangle indicates the pulmonary vein. The white arrow indicates the tumor extending into the left atrium from the pulmonary vein.
Figure 3Microscopic findings of the tumor (magnification: 100×). (A) Tumor consists of highly proliferating small round cells with a high nuclear-to-cytoplasmic ratio (hematoxylin-and-eosin stain). (B) Immunoreactivity was strongly positive for CD99.
Extension of metastatic tumors into the left atrium via invasion of pulmonary veins.
| Case | Reference | Age at diagnosis of extension | Sex | Tumor type | Symptom at diagnosis | Treatment for intra-atrial tumor | Consequence after diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Funakoshi Y | 31 | M | Ewing sarcoma | None | Palliative operation | Alive |
| 2 | Collins | 57 | F | Leiomyo sarcoma | None | None | Arterial occlusion and stroke soon after detection |
| 3 | Woodring | 64 | M | Chondrosarcoma | Headache, left-side facial drop | (Refused surgery) Palliative RT and adriamycin | Died from metastases |
| 4 | Ishibashi | 63 | F | Malignant fibrous histiocytoma | None | CR | Alive |
| 5 | Heslin | 23 | F | Synovial sarcoma | None | CR | Alive |
| 6 | Gandhi | 63 | M | Osteosarcoma | Hemiplegia | Best supportive care | Not described |
| 7 | Senbo | 35 | F | Osteosarcoma | Palpitation, syncopal attack | CR, adjuvant cisplatin | Died from metastases |
| 8 | Vargas-Barron | 55 | F | Carcinoma of the cervix | Hemiplegia, aphasia | CR | Alive and well |
| 9 | Gardner | 28 | M | Chondrosarcoma | Chest pain | CR | Died from local recurrence, lung |
| 10 | Boland | 26 | M | Chondrosarcoma | Hemiplegia, pleuristic chest pain, shortness of breath | CR | Died from metastases |
| 11 | Maclowry | 28 | F | Chondrosarcoma | Headache, facial weakness, blurred vision | Chemotherapy | Died from brain metastases |
All surgeries were conducted under cardiopulmonary bypass.
Soon after detection by X-ray and CT scan, the patient developed systemic emboli (peripheral arterial occlusion and stroke).
Treatment was an embolectomy for peripheral occlusion. Prognosis and follow-up period were not described.
RT, radiation therapy; CR, complete resection (gross complete resection); AO, after operation; AD, after detection; AS, after symptoms.