| Literature DB >> 26036321 |
Andrew L K Ho1, Patryk Szulakowski, Patryk Szulakowsi2, Waria H S Mohamid3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pulmonary tumour thrombotic microangiopathy (PTTM) is a rare complication of metastatic cancer with a distinct histological appearance which presents with dyspnoea and pulmonary arterial hypertension and leads to death in hours to days. It is a challenging diagnosis to make ante mortem, in part due to the rapid clinical decline. Herein, we report a case of a young woman initially felt to have pulmonary sarcoidosis but who then died eight days later from what was found at post mortem to be PTTM. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26036321 PMCID: PMC4451732 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-015-1467-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Axial slice of CTPA performed during the patient’s first admission. CTPA demonstrated small centrilobular soft tissue nodules with branching linear opacities forming a tree-in-bud appearance. This is most often caused by obstruction of small airways by, for example, mucus. In PTTM, however, it is caused by tumour cells in distal arterioles and the resultant inflammation that follows. The differential diagnosis for pulmonary nodular infiltrates with mediastinal lymphadenopathy, particularly the small volume adenopathy seen in our patient, is wide-ranging. It includes both malignant causes such as lymphoma as well as benign causes such as tuberculosis, inflammatory nodules, and sarcoidosis
Pulmonary function tests
| Spirometry | ||
|---|---|---|
| FEV1 | 2.47 L | (80 % predicted) |
| FVC | 3.37 L | (94 % predicted) |
| FEV1/FVC | 73.44 % | |
| Transfer factors | ||
| TLCO | 70 % predicted | |
| KCO | 85 % predicted | |
| Body plethysmography | ||
| TLC | 5.24 L | (97 % predicted) |
| VC | 3.39 L | (93 % predicted) |
Pulmonary function tests performed seven days ante mortem, including lung volumes and transfer factors, were unremarkable
Fig. 2Histological findings of the stomach wall at post mortem. Haematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained sections of the anterior gastric wall showed adenocarcinoma with signet ring cell forms
Fig. 3Histological findings of pulmonary vasculature at post mortem. Post mortem examination of the sections taken from both lungs revealed widespread tumour emboli in small and medium sized arterial vessels including sub-segmental branches of the pulmonary arterial tree. This finding was associated with florid intimal fibrocellular proliferation and muscular hyperplasia of the pulmonary vasculature leading to luminal narrowing and stenosis with extensive intra-luminal thrombosis. The pathological conclusion of PTTM is substantiated by the clinical history of the patient's presentation and clinical outcome of the case