Our case consulted with complaints of chest pain, cough, and hemoptysis. The disease progressed with pulmonary alveolar hemorrhage. The case was operated on with the prediagnosis of myxoma. Cardiac angiosarcoma was identified intraoperatively. We present the case because of the difficulties in the diagnosis, diagnosis by pulmonary symptoms, and death by respiratory failure within a short time.
Zwaveling et al.[6] made a tentative diagnosis of idiopathic pulmonary hemosiderosis in their case because they had seen bilateral nodular infiltration on a chest X-ray, had heard bilateral rales over the lungs, and had noticed the patient complaining of hemoptysis and anemia. However, within a short period of time, respiratory failure developed, the hemoglobin level fell, and a thoracotomy was performed to obtain a histological diagnosis in which a biopsy yielded the angiosarcoma result. Twelve days later, the patient died of respiratory failure. At postmortem examination, cardiac angiosarcoma was found infiltrating the atrial wall. They concluded that although angiosarcoma of the heart is a rare tumor, its presence should be suspected in patients with hemoptysis and nodular chest X-ray abnormalities, even in the absence of symptoms of rightsided cardiac disease.[6]
Our patient consulted with pulmonary symptoms and findings. Because of the hemosiderin-loaded macrophages observed in BAL, the existence of anemia and hemoptysis, and a mass in the right atrium, we first thought the patient had myxoma complicated with pseudovasculitis.[7,8] Cardiac mass could not be accurately recognized despite two transthoracic and one transesophageal echocardiographies (ECHOs). Bic et al.[5] reported patients who consulted with pulmonary infiltrates diagnosed as angiosarcoma by open lung biopsy and who died because of respiratory failure after a short period of time. The primary cardiac tumor was diagnosed only at autopsy. Despite four successive ECHOs performed by three different physicians, a diagnosis of intracardiac tumor was never suggested. The ECHOs were reexamined after the diagnosis was established, and no evidence of an intracardiac tumor was observed. The limited sensitivity of ECHO in the diagnosis of cardiac tumors has been observed previously. No definitive interpretation has been given to explain this discrepancy; however, varied and atypical echogenicity along with the concentric development of the tumor have been suggested as contributory factors.
Classic clinical features of diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage include hemoptysis, anemia, and diffuse radiographic infiltrates. The most common causes are Goodpasture syndrome, vasculitis, such as Wegener's granulomatosis and microscopic polyangiitis (MPA), and connective tissue diseases, including systemic lupus erythematosus and idiopathic pulmonary hemosiderosis. Diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage is rarely the presenting manifestation of angiosarcoma.[4-6] Adem et al.[4] evaluated 16 patients and concluded that diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage is a rare presentation of angiosarcoma and that angiosarcoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage, especially in young adults. In these cases, metastatic angiosarcoma was diagnosed by open lung biopsy or at autopsy. A transbronchial lung biopsy was performed in five patients, but the results were nondiagnostic. The primary tumor was found in the right atrium in seven cases at autopsy. In our patient, because we observed clinical and laboratory regression after steroid therapy, we evaluated the patient as having pseudovasculitis secondary to myxoma and proceeded to operate. A right atrium angiosarcoma was detected intraoperatively. We emphasize that difficulties exist in the diagnosis of cardiac angiosarcoma along with the clinical presentation of diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage.
The therapy for primary cardiac tumors is still controversial, but surgery represents the therapy of choice in cases of localized disease and is conditioned by the site of a tumor and by the frequent presence of metastases. The survival percentage in patients treated with surgery ranges from two to 55 months with a median survival of 14 months. Despite adverse prognostic data, there are reported cases of patients with angiosarcoma treated with only partial resection followed by chemotherapy and radiotherapy who survived for 34 or even 53 months. [9,10] However, Antonuzzo et al.[11] reported the case in which the tumor was partially excised and a four cycles of chemotherapy were given. The patient died after three months. The most frequently used chemotherapy regimens are cyclophosphamide or doxorubicin or vincristine or dacarbazine or mitomycin-C along with cisplatin.[3] Sinatra et al.[12] reported that the combination of surgical resection and radiation can reduce the mass and eliminate symptoms despite an incomplete resection.
In conclusion, primary cardiac angiosarcoma is a fatal disease, and the prognosis is usually bad.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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