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Primary Angiosarcoma of the Spleen: An Oncological Enigma
Author(s) -
Despoina Myoteri,
Dionysios Dellaportas,
Georgios Ayiomamitis,
Strigklis Konstantinos,
Efstratios Kouroumpas,
Adamantia Zizi-Sermpetzoglou
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
case reports in oncological medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.173
H-Index - 7
eISSN - 2090-6714
pISSN - 2090-6706
DOI - 10.1155/2014/193036
Subject(s) - medicine , angiosarcoma , splenectomy , spleen , etiology , hemangiosarcoma , histopathological examination , radiology , presentation (obstetrics) , surgery , pathology
. Primary splenic angiosarcoma is an extremely unusual neoplasm originating from sinusoidal vascular endothelium. Surgical extirpation is the mainstay of treatment of this highly malignant disease. Case Presentation . An 82-year-old woman was admitted with left pleural effusion and a palpable left upper quadrant abdominal mass, secondary to splenomegaly by two large splenic tumors. Classic open splenectomy was performed and angiosarcoma of the spleen was the final histopathological diagnosis, which was primary since no other disease site was revealed. Discussion . The incidence of the disease is 0.14–0.23 cases per million, with slight male predominance. Etiology is not established and clinical presentation may confuse even experienced physicians. Imaging modalities cannot differentiate the lesion from other vascular splenic neoplasms and the correct diagnosis is mainly set after histopathological examination of the resected spleen. As with other sarcomas, surgery is the only curative approach, while chemo- and radiotherapy have poor results. Prognosis remains dismal.

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