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Primary renal angiosarcoma with progressive clinical course despite surgical and adjuvant treatment: A case report
Author(s) -
Filiz Çelebi,
Kezban Nur Pilancı,
Sezer Sağlam,
N. Cem Balci
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
oncology letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.766
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1792-1082
pISSN - 1792-1074
DOI - 10.3892/ol.2015.2902
Subject(s) - angiosarcoma , medicine , malignancy , hemangiosarcoma , nephrectomy , primary tumor , kidney , cancer , surgery , radiology , pathology , metastasis
Angiosarcoma is an extremely rare, high-grade malignancy, which accounts for <2% of all soft-tissue sarcomas. Cases of primary renal angiosarcoma represent 1% of these. Angiosarcomas involving the kidney usually originate from metastatic skin lesions or primary visceral lesions and most often occur in the sixth and seventh decades of life. The present study describes a case of primary renal angiosarcoma that presented as a large right-sided renal mass with symptoms of flank pain. Despite surgical removal of the tumor, recurrent disease with associated lung metastases was identified at the surgical site following adjuvant chemotherapy. The patient succumbed to the disease 13 months after the diagnosis.

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