Figure 1: Chest X-rays in 2002 (a), 2005 (b) and 2015 (c).
Surgical treatment was performed via posterolateral thoracotomy. The mass and adjacent mediastinal pleura and pericardium were totally excised. Postoperative course was uneventful. All symptoms improved immediately.
In pathologic examination, 18¥15¥7 cm, fragile, mostly encapsulated mass consisting of multiple components was evaluated. The main tumor was represented by rounded large cells with reduced amphophilic cytoplasm and large polymorphous hyperchromatic nuclei layering small pseudovascular spaces. T umor c ells r ealized a s carcely s mall network occupied by erythrocytes (Figure 3a). In the immunohistochemical examination, the tumor was diffuse positive for CD31 and CD34 while focally positive for D2-40 and CD68 and negative for actin, keratin 8/18, desmin and CD99 (Figure 3b). Some areas of the tumor consisted of uniform spindle cells with elongated wavy nuclei and pale cytoplasm. Antoni A and Antoni B areas were detected. This component was diffusely positive for S100 protein and focally positive for EMA and also grossly negative for CD31 and CD34 (Figure 3c, d). The vascular tumor component was dominant in mass. With trichrome staining, while the spindle component was rich of collagen, the epithelioid parts were not. Areas of vascular structures were rich of reticulin. Excised mediastinal pleura and pericardium were infiltrated with the tumor. Based on clinical findings and the medical history, the final pathologic diagnosis was epithelioid angiosarcoma arising from a schwannoma.
The patient was consulted to medical and radiation oncology for adjuvant therapy. Because the tumor had invaded both the adjacent pleura and the pericardium, it was not found eligible for adjuvant radiotherapy. So, the patient only received four cycles of Doxorubicin + Ifosfamide + Mesna (2500 mg/m2 Ifosfomide + 2 500 mg/m2 Mesna + 60 mg/m2 Doxorubicin) chemotherapy and follow-up tomography and also positron emission tomography/ computed tomography scan where there was no evidence of malignant tissue. On the 22nd month of follow-up, the patient was free of any signs of disease.
The pathologic pathway leading to the angiosarcoma
transformation is unclear. While some authors suggest
that the angiosarcoma arise directly from the vascular
structures of the schwannoma, some others suggest
that chronic vascular stasis and edema is the triggering
factor.
Differential diagnosis for these extremely rare cases includes epithelioid malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor and the schwannoma variants; therefore, immunohistochemistry is helpful in diagnosis. Factor VIII, CD31 and CD34 are common markers for endothelial differentiation. The benign neural component of the tumor was consisted of uniform spindle cells. Presence of Antoni A and Antoni B areas enabled differentiation from normal anatomic cells.
Malignant tumors of mediastinum are highly challenging for the surgeon. However, it is known that the only curative treatment of soft tissue sarcomas is complete surgical resection. In complete resection, capsule penetration, invasion of the adjacent tissues and large tumor size were shown to be related to poor prognosis.[1] On the other hand, local tumor control can improve survival in mediastinal sarcomas, particularly when the disease is limited in thorax.[8] It is mostly hard to achieve tumor free surgical margins for these types of tumors so neoadjuvant a nd a djuvant t herapy h ad come into scene in recent years.
In conclusion, malignant transformation in a benign schwannoma is a rare condition, while development of an angiosarcoma in this ground is extremely rare. Treatment of these tumors is controversial in the literature. The main goal of therapy is total excision of the tumor for limited disease in selected patients; however, if not possible, adjuvant treatment including chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy may be the only chance. Unfortunately, none of these attempts seem to achieve satisfactory overall survival rates.
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.