| Literature DB >> 27156097 |
Tomoyuki Uchihara1, Yu Imamura1, Shiro Iwagami1, Ikko Kajihara2, Hisashi Kanemaru2, Ryuichi Karashima1, Satoshi Ida1, Takatsugu Ishimoto1, Yoshifumi Baba1, Yasuo Sakamoto1, Yuji Miyamoto1, Naoya Yoshida1, Masayuki Watanabe3, Ken-Ichi Iyama4, Hironobu Ihn2, Hideo Baba5.
Abstract
Intestinal metastasis of angiosarcoma is extremely rare. We herein report a case of intestinal perforation due to intestinal metastasis of angiosarcoma. The patient was a 72-year-old Japanese man with multiple recurrent angiosarcomas of the scalp. He developed acute abdominal pain with guarding, and we performed an emergency exploratory laparotomy. An intestinal perforation was found 80 cm from the ligament of Treitz, and partial jejunectomy was successfully performed. Macroscopic inspection revealed no obvious injury, ulcer, or tumor at or around the perforation site. Pathological examination revealed angiosarcoma cells penetrating through all layers of the jejunum at the site of intestinal perforation. This is the first reported case of intestinal perforation caused by indistinguishable intestinal metastasis of angiosarcoma. This case emphasizes intestinal metastasis of angiosarcoma as a possible cause of small bowel perforation in patients with advanced angiosarcoma, even when no visible tumor is present during surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Angiosarcoma; Intestinal metastasis; Intestinal perforation; Oncologic emergency
Year: 2016 PMID: 27156097 PMCID: PMC4864909 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-016-0169-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Fig. 1Preoperative findings. a The primary site of angiosarcoma of the scalp shows infiltrative spread. An arrow shows the nodule. The tumor is demarcated by the red-brown color (arrowheads). b Tumor cells from the primary site of the scalp (biopsy specimen). c Preoperative findings on contrast-enhanced computed tomography. Focal wall thickening of the small intestine is surrounded by ascites (arrows), and free air is present (arrowheads)
Fig. 2Macroscopic findings of resected small intestine. a No obvious injury or tumor is present on the serosal surface at or around the perforation site. b No obvious ulcer or tumor is present on the mucosal surface at or around the perforation site
Fig. 3Pathological findings of resected small intestine. a Macroscopic cross section and tumor cell mapping (green). An asterisk shows the site of perforation. c Tumor cells are invading through all layers of the jejunum with necrotic change. c Tumor cells are horizontally infiltrating the subserosal layer of the jejunum around the perforation site
Review of reported seven cases (including this case) with intestinal metastasis of angiosarcoma
| Authors, year of publication (reference number) | Age, sex | Primary tumor site | Site of intestinal metastasis | Symptom at presentation | Visible or tactile tumor at the site of perforation | Operative procedure | Outcome and time after surgery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schmid E et al., 1984 [ | 75, M | Aorta, bone | Terminal ileum | Hemorrhage | Present (visible hemorrhage) | Ileocecal resection | Dead, approximately 14 months |
| Kunkel D et al., 1993 [ | ― | Aorta | Massive small intestine | Hemorrhage | ― | ― | ― |
| Bandorski D et al., 2002 [ | 75, M | Thyroid | Massive small intestine | Hemorrhage | ― | Multiple jejunal and ileal resection | ― |
| Hsu JT et al., 2005 [ | 49, M | Spleen | Small intestine | Hemorrhage | Present (visible hemorrhage) | Partial intestinal resection | Dead, 7 months |
| Ruffolo C et al., 2004 [ | 67, M | Scalp | Small intestine | Perforation (due to tumor ulceration) | Present (tactile ulcer) | Intestinal wedge resection | Dead, 16 days (due to respiratory distress) |
| Santonja C et al., 2001 [ | 64, F | Aorta | Ileum | Perforation (due to tumor cell embolization in intestinal artery) | Absent | Right ileocolectomy | Dead, 18 days (due to acute renal failure, and liver infarction) |
| Uchihara et al., 2015 | 72, M | Scalp | Jejunum | Perforation (due to invisible metastatic-tumor-cell penetration) | Absent | Partial jejunal resection | Dead, 23 days (due to hemorrhagic shock due to hemothorax) |
“―” means no data available