| Literature DB >> 28878648 |
Tassia Yamanari1, Marcio Sawamura1, Hye Ju Lee1, Chang Kai Chi1, Artur Katz2.
Abstract
Choriocarcinoma is a highly malignant neoplasm arising from the trophoblast of a human pregnancy, which may have distant spread to multiple organs, particularly to the lung. We report a case of a pulmonary arteriovenous fistula that developed after chemotherapy within a choriocarcinoma metastasis. A 24-year-old female with a history of uterine choriocarcinoma presented with multiple hypervascular pulmonary nodules on the initial chest computed tomography (CT) scan, consistent with lung metastases. Four months after chemotherapy, follow-up chest CT revealed a decrease in the size and vascularity of the lung metastases, except for 1 nodule that persisted with marked contrast enhancement and developed a communication with a pulmonary artery and vein. These findings were consistent with an acquired arteriovenous fistula. Physicians should be aware of the risk of acquired arteriovenous fistula in pulmonary metastases after chemotherapy because it can lead to a right-to-left shunt, pulmonary hemorrhage, and paradoxical emboli. It is also important for the definition of therapeutic planning, in order to avoid it being misdiagnosed as a site of disease progression.Entities:
Keywords: Acquired pulmonary arteriovenous fistula; Chemotherapy; Choriocarcinoma metastasis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28878648 PMCID: PMC5582528 DOI: 10.1159/000478088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Oncol ISSN: 1662-6575
Fig. 1Axial chest computed tomography image in a 24-year-old female with metastatic choriocarcinoma. Initial enhanced chest computed tomography at presentation shows multiple solid pulmonary nodules with hyperenhancement after intravenous contrast.
Fig. 2After 5 months of chemotherapy, the metastatic pulmonary nodules have decreased in size and are not enhancing, except for the nodule that developed arteriovenous fistula. A sagitally reformatted image with maximum intensity projection computed tomography (a) and a volume-rendered multidetector computed tomography image (b), showing communication of the nodule with the solitary feeding artery and a pulmonary draining vein, consistent with arteriovenous fistula.