| Literature DB >> 34094789 |
Abstract
Epithelioid vascular neoplasms of the bone are classified by the World Health Organization (WHO) into only two tiers: low-grade epithelioid hemangioma (EH) and a more malignant category including both epithelioid hemangioendothelioma and epithelioid angiosarcoma. The World Health Organization defines bone EH as a locally aggressive neoplasm with no connotation of benign or intermediate malignancy. We reviewed three cases of EH in our lab archives with the perspective of appraising their histomorphological approach toward diagnosis. Patients were in the age range of 15-25 years. The site of the neoplasms ranged from the carpal bones to the metatarsal bones. Histomorphological examination of the lesions showed a nodular growth pattern of a vascular neoplasm without demonstrable vessel origin. The vasoformative area increased from the center to the periphery, with prominent epithelioid morphology of the endothelial cells at the periphery and an associated inflammatory infiltrate comprising eosinophils, lymphocytes, and plasma cells. The growth pattern was diffuse, with extension into the deeper dermis of overlying skin.Entities:
Keywords: bone; bone neoplasms; epithelioid; epithelioid angiosarcoma; epithelioid haemangioendothelioma; epithelioid haemangioma; fos gene; pseudomyogenic haemangioendothelioma; vascular neoplasms; wwtr1–camta1
Year: 2021 PMID: 34094789 PMCID: PMC8168629 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.15371
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 11a and 1b: Cortical and trabecular bone with an infiltrative vascular neoplasm (H&E scanner view)
H&E: hematoxylin and eosin
Figure 22a (H&E x10), 2b (H&E x40), 2c (H&E x40): Central solid areas composed of endothelial cell sheets with interspersed slit-like channels
H&E: hematoxylin and eosin
Figure 33a (H&E x10), 3b (H&E x10), 3c (H&E x10), 3d (H&E x10): Peripheral well-defined vasformative areas showing large vessels with plump hobnailed endothelial cells and epithelioid endothelial cells
H&E: hematoxylin and eosin
Figure 44a (H&E scanner), 4b (H&E x40): Tumor-associated stroma showing sheets of eosinophils along with lymphocytes and plasma cells
H&E: hematoxylin and eosin
Figure 5Tumor-associated epithelioid endothelial cells showing immunohistochemical positivity for CD34, Factor VIIIr and Ag, PAN-CK, as well as a low Ki-67 mitotic index
CD: cluster of differentiation; PAN-CK: pan-cytokeratin
Histopathological features of three bone epithelioid hemangioma cases
OPD: outpatient department
| Case | Age | Sex | Location | Clinical Setting | Radiology | Clinical Impression | Treatment and Follow-Up | Overall Architecture | Pattern of Vascular Proliferation | Presence of Epithelioid Endothelial Cells | Predominant inflammatory Cell Component and Distribution | Distribution and Depth of Inflammation | Molecular Study |
| 1 | 15 | M | Second metatarsal | Casualty patient with slowly growing swelling in the forefoot for 2 years. | Ill-defined osteolytic lesion with expansile margins. | Enchondroma | Patient treated with bone curettage and there was no recurrence on follow-up. Patient was declared cured and no subsequent treatment was given on follow-up. | Nodular lobular pattern without demonstrable vessel origin. | Central diffuse growth in sheets. Peripheral well-formed blood vessels. Focal spindling of cells arranged in fascicles with slit-like vasculature. | Well-formed vessels toward the periphery showing epithelioid endothelial cells with prominent hobnailing. | Eosinophils along with lymphocytes and plasma cells. | Diffuse and extending into the deep dermis of the overlying skin. | Not done due to patient’s disinterest. |
| 2 | 25 | F | Carpal bone | OPD patient with insidious onset and progressive swelling in the wrist. | Ill-defined osteolytic lesion with cortical erosion and periosteal reactive bone formation. | Aneurysmal bone cyst | Patient treated with bone curettage and there was no recurrence on follow-up. Patient was declared cured and no subsequent treatment was given on follow-up. | Nodular lobular pattern without demonstrable vessel origin. | Central diffuse growth in sheets. Peripheral well-formed blood vessels. Focal spindling of cells arranged in fascicles with slit-like vasculature. | Well-formed vessels toward the periphery showing epithelioid endothelial cells. | Eosinophils along with lymphocytes and plasma cells. | Diffuse. | Not done due to patient’s disinterest. |
| 3 | 20 | M | First metatarsal | Casualty patient with progressive insidious onset and slowly growing swelling in the forefoot for 1 year. | Ill-defined expansile sclerotic lesion with reactive bone formation and periosteal reaction. | Enchondroma | Patient treated with bone curettage and there was no recurrence on follow-up. Patient was declared cured and no subsequent treatment was given on follow-up. | Nodular lobular pattern without demonstrable vessel origin. | Central diffuse growth in sheets. Peripheral well-formed blood vessels. | Well-formed vessels toward the periphery showing epithelioid endothelial cells with prominent hobnailing. | Eosinophils along with lymphocytes and plasma cells. | Diffuse and extending into the deep dermis of the overlying skin. | Not done due to patient’s disinterest. |
Figure 66A and 6B: Radiology showing osteolytic and sclerosing lesions in metatarsal bone
Histological features of epithelioid hemangioma (EH) in different tissues
| EH of the skin and subcutaneous tissue | EH of soft tissue | EH of the bone | |
| Neoplastic potential of the vascular component | Reactive lesion to trauma. Angiocentric distribution around a larger vessel with evidence of mural damage often associated with trauma. | Reactive lesion to trauma. However, a case of dermal EH was found to harbor a TEK gene mutation, which encodes the endothelial cell tyrosine kinase receptor Tie-2, indicating that certain molecular abnormalities may also contribute to pathogenesis [ | Distinct cytogenetic events and lack of an eosinophilic response in some tumors suggest distinct pathogenesis compared with that in skin EH. FOS gene rearrangement and recurrent ZFP36–FOSB fusion are present in nearly one-third of bone EH cases in varied locations [ |
| Neoplastic potential of the inflammatory cell component | These lesions are associated with various lymphoproliferative conditions, supporting the contention that some EH cases arise from a monoclonal T-cell process [ | Mostly polyclonal and reactive. No lymphoproliferative conditions documented to date. | |
| Margins | Well-marginated lesions. | Less-marginated lesions [ | Less-marginated lesions. |
| Association with an artery | Demonstrable angiocentric distribution and symmetric association with an artery. The artery can show evidence of damage (e.g., thrombosis, fibrointimal proliferation, duplication of the internal elastic lamina, or mural disruption) [ | Rarely associated with a muscular artery [ | Symmetrical association with an artery is not usually demonstrable in bone lesions because the site of origin may be obliterated by the expanding tumor [ |
| Vasoformative tendency | Vasoformative tendency and vessel maturation increase from the center to the periphery, resulting in central ill-defined poorly formed vessels (Fig | Similar vasoformative tendency to EH of the skin but lesions contain more fully developed vessels, typically with patent lumina. [ | Vasoformativetendency but often greater histological variability within lesions. |
| Histomorphology | Well-defined epithelioid endothelial morphology (Figure | Less pronounced epithelioid endothelial morphology (often more cobblestone-like) [ | Recognizable epithelioid endothelial morphology. Spindling and fasciculation may be observed within the lesion [ |
Clinical and histological features distinguishing EH, EHE, and EAS
EH: epithelioid hemangioma; EHE: epithelioid hemangioendothelioma; EAS: epithelioid angiosarcoma
| Histomorphological features | EH | EHE | Pseudomyogenic hemangioendothelioma | EAS | |
| Neoplastic nature | Benign with metastasizing potential [ | Intermediate [ | Intermediate [ | High-grade [ | |
| Association with artery | Intimately associated with and symmetrically distributed with a small muscular artery. | Lacks intimate association with a muscular artery [ | Lacks intimate association with a muscular artery [ | Lacks intimate association with a muscular artery [ | |
| Presence of mature vessel foci with open lumen formation [ | Mature vessels absent [ | Mature vessels absent [ | Mature vessels absent [ | ||
| Molecular pathology | FOS gene rearrangement in nearly 1/3 of EH cases in various locations [ | Recurrent t(1;3)(p36;q25) chromosomal translocation, resulting in WWTR1–CAMTA1 fusion [ | SERPINE1-FOSB fusion [ | Complex cytogenetic aberrations. No WWTR1–CAMTA1 fusion or FOS gene rearrangement [ | |
| Sites | Femur, phalanges, tibia, fibula, metatarsals, scapula, humerus, ilium, vertebrae, sacrum, ribs, and sternum [ | May involve any bone and has been detected in the femur, tibia, fibula, humerus, radius, ulna, ribs, vertebral bodies, pelvis, scapula, and small bones of the hands and feet [ | Superficial or deep soft tissue of extremities [ | Predilection for the femur. Other affected bones include the tibia, calcaneus, humerus, radius, and small bones of the hand, rib, and pelvis [ | |
| Multifocality | Unicentric to multicentric [ | Unicentric to multicentric [ | Multicentric [ | Unicentric to multicentric [ | |
| Age | Second to eighth decades of life (mean age of 34 years) [ | Slight male predominance and a wide age distribution extending from the second to eighth decades of life [ | Males. Young adults. [ | Striking male predominance with a mean age of 57 years [ | |
| Gross | Ranges from 2 to 15 cm in the biggest dimension, well-circumscribed, and dark red in color. Mostly confined to the affected bone where they infiltrate the marrow space, surround the bony trabeculae, and abut or erode the cortex. Occasionally, large tumors transgress the cortex and form soft-tissue masses [ | Ranges from 2 cm to >10 cm. Frequently tan in color and solid in structure. Usually centered in the medullary cavity and grow in an infiltrative and destructive fashion [ | Ranges from 1 to 2.5cm only with approximately 10% of tumors being >3cm [ | Usually >5 cm and soft, red, and hemorrhagic. Usually originates in the medullary cavity and invades the cortex and neighboring soft tissues [ | |
| Radiology | Usually lucent with well-defined expansile margins [ | Usually lytic or mixed lytic and blastic with well- or poorly defined margins. Can expand the bone contour and elicit a periosteal reaction, especially if a soft-tissue component is present [ | Usually lytic, lobulated, and well-circumscribed on CT and radiography. On MRI, the lesions are hypointense on T1-weighted images and hyperintense on T2-weighted and stir-weighted images [ | Predominantly destructive or exclusively lytic, frequently extending into soft tissues. | |
| Microscopy | |||||
| Growth pattern | Lobular growth pattern showing symmetric association with the vessel wall. Infiltrative and destructive but non-metastasizing [ | The lobular growth pattern characterizing EH is absent. No involvement of medium-sized or larger vessels. Infiltrative, destructive, and metastasizing. Higher rates of multifocality and distant spread [ | |||
| Tumor architecture | The central areas of the lobules contain epithelioid endothelial cells in solid sheets but without a coherent structure. The periphery shows well-formed vessels [ | Primitive epithelioid endothelial cells present singly in cords, clusters, and/or sheet-like arrangements. If spindled, they tend to be oriented in fascicles. Well-formed vascular channels are relatively scant or absent. [ | Ill-defined nodules and fascicles. Desmoplastic stroma [ | Irregular vascular spaces, sometimes with a papillary pattern, sheets, and areas of solid growth. May protrude into lumens of well-developed vascular spaces in the form of solid tufts or nodules. | |
| Vasoformative tendency | Vasoformative tendency and vessel maturation increase from the center to the periphery. [ | Frequent intracytoplasmic lumens. | Not present [ | Vascular channels. Intracytoplasmic lumens [ | |
| Tumor cell morphology | The cytoplasm is abundant, eosinophilic, and frequently contains one or more large clear vacuoles (Figure | Populations of elongated and spindle-shaped cells. Elongated cells have prominent intracytoplasmic vacuoles, whereas vacuoles are rare in spindle cells. | Plump spindle or epithelioid cells, with abundant brightly eosinophilic cytoplasm, sometimes mimicking rhabdomyoblasts [ | Numerous intracytoplasmic vacuoles [ | |
| Nuclear morphology | Consistent absence of anaplasia, cytologic atypia, and necrosis. Minimal necrotic activity. | The tumor cells contain vesicular nuclei, often with small nucleoli. Greater variability in size and degree of nuclear atypia than with EH. Differentiation from EAS may be difficult if atypia is severe. | The tumor cells contain vesicular nuclei, often with small nucleoli. The degree of nuclear atypia is usually mild, and mitotic activity is scarce [ | Marked nuclear atypia and pleomorphism. | |
| Usually <5 mitoses per 10 hpf. Mitotic figures are structurally normal [ | Greater atypia than EH;>5 mitoses per 10 hpf [ | Greater atypia than EH;>5 mitoses per 10 hpf [ | Abundant atypical mitotic figures (>20 per hpf) [ | ||
| Tumor-associated inflammation and stroma | The stroma contains loose, fibrous connective tissue that often contains lymphocytes, varying numbers of eosinophils (Fig | Little inflammatory infiltrate or peritumoral reactive change, unlike EH. | Approximately 50% of cases contain prominent stromal neutrophils, unlike epithelioid hemangioendothelioma (EHE) and angiosarcoma. | Neutrophilia and diffuse interstitial hemorrhage are common and necrosis may be extensive. Little lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate or eosinophilic infiltrate, unlike EH. | |
| No stromal hyalinization or a basophilic ground substance resembling the cartilage (a feature characteristic of EHE). Reactive woven bone is commonplace and when abundant can mimic a bone-forming neoplasm. | Characteristically, stroma has a hyalinized or basophilic appearance and lacks inflammatory cells. [ | Occasionally contain focally myxoid stroma [ | Hyalinized or basophilic stroma is absent. Myxohyaline stroma can be a focal feature. Post-radiation specimens may show prominent fibrosis and hyalinization. | ||
| IHC for muscle-specific actin | Zonation pattern [ | No zonation pattern. | No zonation pattern. | No zonation pattern. | |
| Other IHC markers and their predictive values. | CD34+, CD31+, Fli-1+, ERG+, FOSB +, CKs+, CAMTA1-, INI-1 retained. (100% CAMTA1, TFE3 negative 21% FOSB-positive) [ | CD34+, CD31+, Fli-1+, ERG+, FOSB -, CKs+, CAMTA1+, INI-1 retained. (100% FOSB-negative, 62% CAMTA1-positive-TFE3 negative, 38% CAMTA1-negative, TFE3-positive) [ | CD34-, CD31+, Fli-1+, ERG+, FOSB+, CKs+, CAMTA1 -, INI-1 retained. (100% CAMTA1, TFE3 negative, 100% FOSB-positive) [ | CD34+ (50%), CD31+, Fli1+, ERG+, FOSB -, CKs+, CAMTA1 -, INI-1 retained. (100% -CAMTA1,TFE3-negative, FOSB-negative) [ | |
| Treatment | Depending on the size and location of the lesion(s), curettage, conservative en block excision, or wide resection is recommended. | The number, size, location, and stage of the tumor determine the treatment type. Wide resection is recommended when feasible. Chemotherapy has been suggested for widespread multisystemic involvement. | The treatment of choice has been surgery (wide resection), with certain cases receiving radiotherapy or chemotherapy. Recently, high expression of mTOR has been demonstrated by immunohistochemistry, and two cases treated with mTOR inhibitors showed clinical improvement [ | Wide surgical resection with or without adjuvant radiation and chemotherapy. These tumors have an extremely high rate of metastasis and virtually all patients die within 1–2 years of diagnosis. | |
Distinguishing EH from Kimura’s disease
EH: epithelioid hemangioma
| Epithelioid haemangioma | Kimura’s disease | |
| Ethnicity | Occurs in all ethnicities [ | Predominantly affects Asian males [ |
| Location | Superficial and smaller lesions [ | Subcutaneous involvement with extension to lymph nodes, underlying soft tissue, and salivary glands [ |
| Complete blood counts and serology | Lacks high IgE and eosinophils in peripheral blood [ | High IgE, eosinophils in peripheral blood, and eosinophilia. Could be misdiagnosed as nephrotic syndrome, asthma, tuberculosis, or Loeffler syndrome [ |
| Epithelioid morphology | Epithelioid endothelial cells line all blood vessels [ | Proliferation of post-capillary venules lined by plump endothelial cells [ |
| Overlapping morphologic features | Lymph follicles with germinal center formation and abundant eosinophils (less intense than in Kimura’s disease) [ | Lymph follicles with germinal center formation and abundant eosinophils (more intense than in EH) [ |
| Eosinophilic microabscesses and Charcot–Leyden crystals | Negative [ | Present [ |
Distinguishing EH from an arthropod bite response and cutaneous epithelioid angiomatous nodules
EH: epithelioid hemangioma
| Epithelioid hemangioma | Arthropod bite | Cutaneous epithelioid angiomatous nodules | |
| Extent of capillary proliferation | Marked capillary proliferation [ | Subtle capillary proliferation [ | Sheet-like proliferation of endothelial cells in skin [ |
| Growth pattern | Lobular growth pattern with numerous epithelioid endothelial cells [ | No lobular orientation and relatively few endothelial cells [ | No multilobular growth pattern as seen in EH [ |
Distinguishing EH from cutaneous marginal zone lymphoma
EH: epithelioid hemangioma
| Epithelioid hemangioma | Cutaneous marginal zone lymphoma | |
| Pattern of inflammation | Nodular polyclonal perivascular or periappendigeal lymphocytic infiltrate with CD30+ lymphoid infiltrates [ | |
| Added features | Absence of factors listed (right panel) [ | Dutcher bodies, lymphoplasmacytoid cells, folliculotropism and syringotropism, monoclonality, and aberrant BCL2 expression [ |
| Epithelioid vascular component | Prominent epithelioid vascular component [ | No epithelioid vascular component [ |