Clinical and imaging characteristics of patients with primary cardiac angiosarcoma.
10.3760/cma.j.cn112148-20200427-00351
- Author:
Yuan Yuan ZHU
1
;
Li Lin GUO
1
;
Zhuang TIAN
1
;
Yong Tai LIU
1
;
Jin Zhi LAI
1
;
Yan Lin ZHU
1
;
Shu Yang ZHANG
1
;
Li Gang FANG
1
Author Information
1. Department of Cardiology, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Science and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100730, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Aftercare;
Female;
Heart Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging*;
Hemangiosarcoma/diagnostic imaging*;
Humans;
Male;
Middle Aged;
Patient Discharge;
Pericardial Effusion
- From:
Chinese Journal of Cardiology
2021;49(4):374-379
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective: To investigate the clinical, cardiac imaging characteristics and prognosis of patients with primary cardiac angiosarcoma. Methods: The clinical data of 14 patients hospitalized with primary cardiac angiosarcoma from January 2001 to December 2017 in Peking Union Medical College Hospital were collected and analyzed. Metastatic cardiac angiosarcoma was not included in this study. Patients were followed up post discharge per telephone call or clinical visit. Results: Of the 14 patients, 8 were males and 6 were females, average age was 48 years. The main clinical symptoms were shortness of breath (8/14), hemoptysis (6/14), fever (5/14), chest pain (4/14) and cough (3/14). Imaging examinations showed that the tumors of 8 patients were located in the right heart and 6 in the pericardial cavity. Tumors in the right heart often infiltrate the atrial wall and cause pericardial effusion (7/8). Tumors in the pericardium were characterized by recurrent bloody pericardial effusion (6/6), prone to progressive constrictive pericarditis (3/6), pericardial fluid cytology was often negative (6/6). MRI showed heterogeneous high signal intensity (cauliflower aspect) on T2-weighted image and heterogeneous enhancement with a"sunray" aspect at the perfusion study. At the time of diagnosis, 8 patients developed lung or adrenal metastasis (8/14). The median survival was only 305 days. Conclusions: Primary cardiac angiosarcoma is a rare disease with non-specific clinical manifestation and poor prognosis. Imaging examinations may help diagnosis. The high invasiveness and the easy-to-metastasis feature of the tumor contribute to the poor prognosis of cardiac angiosarcoma.