| Literature DB >> 30460329 |
Dana C Galván1, Anoop P Ayyappan2, Brad A Bryan3.
Abstract
Angiosarcoma is the most common malignant cardiac tumor. Cardiac angiosarcoma is a highly lethal neoplasm that is largely resistant to conventional anti-cancer therapy. Mean survival of patients with cardiac angiosarcoma is only 4 months, and almost all patients will succumb to the disease within 1 year. The beta blocker propranolol is an emerging therapy against angiosarcoma. When combined with conventional therapies, propranolol increases progression free and overall survival in patients with this tumor type. It is currently unknown if propranolol is capable of showing anti-cancer efficacy as a single agent therapy. We report a case of a 61 year old woman diagnosed with primary cardiac angiosarcoma and liver and lung metastases. This patient chose to decline conventional therapy, and instead was prescribed the beta blocker propranolol as a single agent treatment. After 12 months, the mediastinal mass substantially debulked and decreased in size, and the metastatic nodules stabilized or resolved with no evidence of hyper-metabolic activity on PET-CT. This is the first reported data showing long term efficacy of the beta blocker propranolol as a single agent therapy against angiosarcoma.Entities:
Keywords: angiosarcoma; beta blocker; cardiac tumor; metastatic; propranolol
Year: 2018 PMID: 30460329 PMCID: PMC6231448 DOI: 10.18632/oncoscience.472
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncoscience ISSN: 2331-4737
Figure 1CT imaging of cardiac angiosarcoma prior to propranolol treatment
(A) Baseline axial chest CT showing a large soft-tissue mass invading the right atrium and encasing the heart (red arrow). There is also nodular pleural thickening (yellow arrow) along the costal and mediastinal pleural surfaces and a small pleural effusion secondary to pleural infiltration. (B) Baseline coronal chest CT shows soft tissue mass encasing the ascending aorta (yellow arrowhead) and main pulmonary artery (yellow arrowhead). (C) Baseline axial chest CT shows circumferential pericardial thickening and effusion (yellow arrowhead) and nodular pleural thickening (yellow arrow) with loculated pleural effusion. Note small hypodense lesions in the right lobe of the liver consistent with metastases (red arrow).
Figure 2CT imaging of cardiac angiosarcoma subsequent to propranolol treatment
(A) Axial chest CT following treatment with non-selective beta blocker shows marked reduction in size of the pericardial and pleural mass. There is minimal residual pleural (red arrowhead) and pericardial thickening (yellow arrowhead). (B) Coronal chest CT shows regression of soft tissue mass encasing the ascending aorta and main pulmonary artery after treatment with non-selective beta blocker. (C) Axial CT abdomen following treatment with non-selective beta blocker shows resolution of liver metastases.