| Literature DB >> 26015825 |
Julita Salijevska1, Robert Watson1, Amy Clifford2, Andrew I Ritchie2, Francisco Mauri3, David Adeboyeku2.
Abstract
Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma (EHE) is a rare malignant cancer of vascular origin that can affect multiple and varied tissue sites. A subtype of EHE, pulmonary epithelioid hemangioendothelioma (PHE), is more unusual with only 200 reported cases. Of these, only 27 have been classified as pleural in origin. Based on available literature, the average age of presentation of pleural PHE is 45.7 years with a male preponderance of 2.375. A summary of all published case reports reveals significant heterogeneity both in presentation and management. Here we add to this knowledge-base with a report of an unusual case of pleural PHE in a 36-year-old female who presented with a 6-week history of chest pain and breathlessness. Significant challenges in the diagnosis and management of patients with pleural PHE exist, including a wide initial differential diagnosis and difficulties in obtaining tissue specimens, coupled with relatively limited treatment options. Early referral to a cardiothoracic center for video-assisted thoracoscopic biopsy is crucial in facilitating a diagnosis and allowing adequate pleural drainage for symptomatic relief.Entities:
Keywords: Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma; Intravascular bronchoalveolar tumor; Pleura; Pulmonary hemangioendothelioma
Year: 2015 PMID: 26015825 PMCID: PMC4432902 DOI: 10.14740/jocmr2174w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med Res ISSN: 1918-3003
Summary of Published Cases of Pleural PHE
| Authors | Age/gender | Symptom at presentation | Imaging | Other sites involved | Treatment | Reported survival (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lee et al, 2008 [ | 31/F | Chest pain | Pleural thickening on CT | Lung, bone | Adriamycin, MAID | 10 |
| Pinet, 1999 [ | 50/F | NA | Right pleural effusion | Ascites | Carboplatin and etoposide | 18+ |
| Crotty et al, 2000 [ | 51 - 71/M | Chest pain (3), dyspnea (3), cough, fever (1), weight loss (1) | Pleural effusions, nodules and thickening | Lung (2), LN, liver and retroperitoneum (1) | Unknown | 1 - 19 |
| Lazarus, 2011 [ | 42/M | 1. Cough, dyspnea, chest pain | 1. Right pleural effusion | 1. Skin | 1. Taxol and bevacizumab | 8 |
| Yousem and Hochholzer, 1987 [ | 34/M | Dyspnea | Bilateral pleural effusions | No | None | 3 |
| Lin, 1996 [ | 36 - 58/M | NA | Pleural effusion (n = 6) | Pericardial effusion n = 1 | NA | NA |
| Al-Sharim et al, 2005 [ | 51/M | Cough, dyspnea | Left pleural effusion | Skin | INF-alpha | 24+ |
| Vitorio, 2004 [ | 61/M | Chest pain | Left pleural effusion and thickening | No | Cisplatin and etoposide | 3 |
| Saqi, 2007 [ | 37/M | Dyspnea, chest pain | Right pleural effusion | No | NA | NA |
| Liu et al, 2010 [ | 80/M | Dyspnea | Right-sided effusion | No | Surgical, chemotherapy unknown | 6 |
| Bocchino, 2010 [ | 58/F | Cough, dyspnea, chest pain | Pleural mass | No | None | 3 |
| Andre, 2010 [ | 65/F | Chest pain | Pleural effusion | Carboplatin, etoposide | 6 | |
| Kim et al, 2011 [ | 46/F | Cough, chest discomfort | Right pleural effusion | No | Surgical, carboplatin, etoposide | 22+ |
| Marquez-Medina, 2011 [ | 85/M | Chest and shoulder pain, fatigue, weight loss | Pleural effusion | None | 7 | |
| Bansal, 2012 [ | 51/F | Chest pain, weight loss | Pleural effusion and thickening | No | Doxorubicin | 4 |
| Yu, 2013 [ | 39/F | Dyspnea | Pleural mass on CT | Myocardial compression | Surgical, carboplatin, etoposide | 14+ |
| Ha, 2014 [ | 71/M | Cough, dyspnea, fatigue | Bilateral pleural effusions | Pericardial effusion, lung | NA | NA |
| This case, 2014 | 36/F | Chest pain | Right whiteout | Lungs | Paclitaxel | 6 |
Figure 1Chest radiograph demonstrating complete opacification of the right hemithorax with mild mediastinal shift to the left side.
Figure 2CT scan demonstrating pleural thickening, effusion, right lung collapse and left mediastinal shift.
Figure 3Histology from VATS guided pleural biopsy. Tumor shows cords, nests and groups of medium or large sized epithelioid cells with inconspicuous nucleoli set in a myxoid stroma. Some cells show mild atypia. Many cells have intracytoplasmic lumina which occasionally contain red blood cells (arrows). Tumor cells are positive for CD31 (insert) and CD34.