Angiosarcomas

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Angiosarcomas

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USMLE® Step 1 style questions USMLE

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A 58-year-old Caucasian man comes to the office because of dull abdominal pain and nausea for the past 2 months. The pain is located at the right side of the abdomen, and the patient rates it 4/10 in intensity. The patient has worked as an engineer in a PVC pipe factory for the past 35 years. Medical history is relevant for hypertension, obesity, and recent travel to China. His temperature is 37.0°C (98.6°F), pulse is 80/min, and blood pressure is 135/85 mmHg. Physical examination shows pale skin and conjunctiva, hepatomegaly, and shifting dullness to percussion. Abdominal computed tomography reveals a hypoattenuating, solitary mass with nodular enhancement in the liver. Immunostaining is positive for CD31. Serum alpha-fetoprotein is 8 ng/mL (normal value <10 ng/mL). Serology is negative for hepatitis B and C. Which of the following is the most likely cause for this patient’s presentation?  

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In angiosarcoma, -sarcoma refers to a malignant tumor, and angio- refers to a blood vessel or a lymphatic vessel. So angiosarcoma is a cancer of either a blood vessel, in which case it’s called a hemangiosarcoma, or a cancer of a lymphatic vessel, in which case it’s called a lymphangiosarcoma. Both arise from the inner lining of the vessel wall, known as endothelium.

Angiosarcomas form when endothelial cells suddenly start proliferating abnormally. If these masses grow inside the blood vessel lumen, they can obstruct the blood flow, and that interferes with the oxygen and nutrient supply to various tissues, and can eventually result in tissue ischemia. If lymph flow is obstructed, lymph fluid backs up in the tissues, causing lymphedema.

Cancer cells from hemangiosarcomas and lymphangiosarcomas can also invade the vessel wall, destroying it and making it burst, leading to bleeding or lymph fluid outflow in the surrounding tissue. In general, these cancer cells multiply rapidly and can be easily carried by blood flow or lymphatic flow to far-off sites within the body, particularly the lungs, where they form a new, metastatic tumor or tumors. Because of this, angiosarcoma is considered to be a particularly aggressive type of cancer.

Angiosarcomas can occur anywhere in the body, but most often develop within the skin, bone, soft tissue, breast, or liver, and often spread from those locations to the lungs. Angiosarcoma of the skin usually shows up on the head or neck as a raised, purplish skin area that looks like a bruise that doesn’t heal; it may bleed, be painful, or be accompanied by swelling of the skin surrounding the affected area. Angiosarcoma of the bone is usually multifocal, meaning it affects multiple sites within the same bone, or involves multiple bones of the same limb.

Summary

Angiosarcomas are rare and aggressive cancers that can develop from lymphatic or vascular endothelial cells. They can occur anywhere in the body, but most commonly arise in the scalp, breast, and chest. These tumors are often hard to diagnose early because they can mimic other more benign conditions.

Sources

  1. "Robbins Basic Pathology" Elsevier (2017)
  2. "Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Twentieth Edition (Vol.1 & Vol.2)" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  3. "Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine 8E" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  4. "Angiosarcoma: clinical and imaging features from head to toe" The British Journal of Radiology (2017)
  5. "Angiosarcoma" The Lancet Oncology (2010)
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