| Literature DB >> 26500758 |
Jason Joseph1, Wei-Lien Wang2, Madhavi Patnana3, Naveen Ramesh1, Robert Benjamin1, Shreyaskumar Patel1, Vinod Ravi1.
Abstract
Pseudomyogenic hemangioendothelioma (PMH) is a recently described, indolent vascular tumor that usually presents in the distal extremities. PMH typically has a multi-focal presentation and can involve several tissue planes including the dermis, subcutis, muscle, and bone. This soft tissue tumor predominantly affects men between 20 and 50 years of age. PMH tumors typically are resected but frequently recur locally; thus, more efficacious treatment options are needed. Herein, we report two cases of patients with PMH who were treated with systemic therapy. To the best of our knowledge, our report is the first to describe a response of PMH either to gemcitabine/taxane cytotoxic chemotherapy or to a mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor. In the first case, a 45-year-old man with PMH of the right ilium was treated with gemcitabine plus docetaxel. Although chemotherapy was ultimately halted owing to gemcitabine-induced pulmonary toxicity, positron emission tomography-computer tomography scans taken after three cycles of gemcitabine plus docetaxel illustrated a noticeable response to the regimen. In the second case, a 22-year-old man with PMH of the right distal femur and metastases in the left ilium showed no response to gemcitabine plus docetaxel therapy, but underwent surgical resection after cisplatin and doxorubicin resulted in stable disease. DNA sequencing of his tumor revealed the presence of a tuberous sclerosis 1 (TSC1) mutation, so daily everolimus, which inhibits mammalian target of rapamycin, was started. Two months after beginning everolimus, the patient underwent magnetic resonance imaging of the pelvis, which revealed mild shrinkage of PMH metastases in the left iliac bone. Despite the apparent heterogeneity of response to gemcitabine/taxane chemotherapy in our two patients, these two cases indicate that gemcitabine/taxane and mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor may serve as systemic treatment options for PMH and warrant further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: Hemangioendothelioma; Pseudomyogenic; Sarcoma; Soft tissue tumor; mTOR inhibitor
Year: 2015 PMID: 26500758 PMCID: PMC4615364 DOI: 10.1186/s13569-015-0037-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Sarcoma Res ISSN: 2045-3329
Fig. 1Imaging studies for 45-year-old patient (“Case 1”) with pseudomyogenic hemangioendothelioma. a Baseline fat saturated T1-weighted axial magnetic resonance image with intravenous contrast enhancement of the pelvis demonstrates multiple enhancing tumor foci in the right iliac bone (white arrow). b Positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) fusion image through the pelvis demonstrates diffuse metabolic activity in the right anterior iliac bone (disease in the right posterior iliac bone at the level of the sacroiliac joint was also present but is not shown). This image was obtained 1 month before the patient began gemcitabine/docetaxel. c PET-CT fusion image through the pelvis after three cycles of gemcitabine/docetaxel demonstrates a significant metabolic response
Fig. 2Baseline magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) studies for a 22-year-old man (“Case 2”) with pseudomyogenic hemangioendothelioma. a Baseline contrast-enhanced, fat-saturated T1-weighted axial MR image of the right thigh demonstrates multifocal enhancing lesions in the distal femoral metadiaphysis (short white arrow) and vastus intermedius muscle and subcutaneous fat. b PET-CT fusion image through the distal femurs demonstrates corresponding hypermetabolic activity. Restaging examinations after two cycles of gemcitabine and docetaxel (not shown) did not demonstrate any significant response
Fig. 3Imaging studies obtained during treatment for a 22-year-old man (“Case 2”) with pseudomyogenic hemangioendothelioma. a Fat-saturated T1-weighted axial magnetic resonance image with intravenous contrast enhancement of the pelvis demonstrates a solitary enhancing tumor focus in the supra-acetabular region of the left iliac bone (white arrow), before everolimus treatment. b Positron emission tomography-computed tomography fusion image through the pelvis demonstrates corresponding metabolic activity. This image was obtained before the patient began everolimus treatment. c Fat-saturated T1-weighted axial MR image with intravenous contrast enhancement of the pelvis obtained after 2 months of everolimus demonstrates partial response of the solitary enhancing tumor focus in the supra-acetabular region of the left iliac bone
Reported cases of pseudomyogenic hemangioendothelioma
| References | Cases (N) | Sex | Tumor location | Multifocality at diagnosis | Management |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sheng [ | 1 | Male: 100 % (1of 1) | Extremity: 100 % (1 of 1) | 100 % (1 of 1) | Excision: 100 % (1 of 1) |
| Hornick and Fletcher [ | 50 | Male: 82 % (41 of 50) | Extremity: 78 % (39 of 50) | 66 % (33 of 50) | Excision: 92 % (46 of 50) |
| Amary et al. [ | 5 (1 case included in Hornick was excluded)a | Male: 50 % (2 of 4) | Extremity: 100 % (4 of 4) | 75 % (3 of 4) | Excision: 75 % (3of 4) |
| Stuart et al. [ | 1 | Male: 100 % (1 of 1) | Extremity: 100 % (1 of 1) | 100 % (1 of 1) | Chemotherapy: 100 % (1 of 1) |
| Sheng and Wang [ | 1 | Male: 0 % (0 of 1) | Extremity: 100 % (1 of 1) | 100 % (1 of 1) | Excision: 100 % (1 of 1) |
| Requena et al. [ | 2 | Male: 50 % (1 of 2) | Extremity: 50 % (1 of 2) | 100 % (2 of 2) | Excision: 100 % (2 of 2) |
| Righi [ | 2 | Male: 50 % (1 of 2) | Extremity: 100 % (2 of 2) | 100 % (2 of 2) | Excision: 100 % (2 of 2) |
| Karakasli et al. [ | 1 | Male: 100 % (1 of 1) | Extremity: 100 % (1 of 1) | 0 % (0 of 1) | Excision: 100 % (1 of 1) |
| McGinity [ | 1 | Male: 100 % (1 of 1) | Extremity: 0 % (0 of 1) | 0 % (0 of 1) | Excision: 100 % (1 of 1) |
| Total | 63 | Male: 78 % (49 of 63) | Extremity: 79 % (50 of 63) | Multifocality at diagnosis: 68 % (43 of 63) | Excision: 90 % (57 of 63) |
aPatient 5 of this report was already accounted for in the series by Hornick et al. [2]