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Soft Tissue Tumors Part 3 - Muscle, Vascular, Nerve, Other

Benign vascular tumors

Microvenular hemangioma

 

Author: Nat Pernick, M.D., PathologyOutlines.com, Inc.

Revised: 31 October 2009, last major update October 2009

Copyright: (c) 2002-2009, PathologyOutlines.com, Inc.

 

Definition

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● Dermal proliferation of small, irregular branching capillaries and venules with inconspicuous lumina

 

Terminology

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● First described in 1989 as microcapillary hemangioma (Z Hautkr 1989;64:1071), and in 1991 with current terminology (J Cutan Pathol 1991;18:235)

 

Epidemiology

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Rare, < 50 cases reported

● Young to middle aged adults

 

Sites

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● Often trunk or limbs

 

Etiology

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● May be form of acquired venous hemangioma

Microcapillary hemangioma: similar histology, but occurs in young women taking oral contraceptives or during pregnancy

 

Clinical features

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● Presents as slow growing, solitary, asymptomatic, purple-red papule or plaque

 

Case reports

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23 year old Japanese woman (Pathol Int 1998;48:237)

● 28 year old man with thigh nodule (Case of the Week #80)

● 40 year old woman (Dermatology 2003;206:161)

● 55 year old woman with POEMS syndrome and HHV8+ microvenular hemangioma (Archives 2003;127:1034)

 

Treatment

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● Excision is curative

 

Gross images

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Well defined, oval red lesion

 

Dermoscopic description

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● Multiple well-demarcated red globules; fine pigment network at periphery (Dermatology 2007;215:69)

 

Microscopic description

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● Dermal proliferation of small, irregular branching capillaries and venules with inconspicuous lumina

● Endothelial cells may be plump, but no atypia

● Stroma is collagenous

● Variable lymphocytes

● No fat invasion, although may grow along collagenous septa of subcutis

● No spindle cells

 

Micro images

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Case of the Week images

 

 

               

Dermal vascular proliferation

 

 

HHV8+ tumor

 

Positive stains

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Endothelial cells - CD34, CD31, Factor VIII related antigen, vWF, Ulex europaeus lectin

Pericytes - smooth muscle actin

 

Negative  stains

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● Podoplanin (Pathol Res Pract 2008;204:817), HHV8

 

Differential diagnosis

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Acquired (tufted) angioma: multiple vascular lobules similar to pyogenic granuloma but more cellular, resembling cannonballs

● Kaposi's sarcoma-patch stage: irregular vascular spaces are anastomosing but not collapsed, and are accompanied by atypical endothelial cells, eosinophilic hyaline globules, plasma cells and fascicles of spindle cells; may be irregular dissection of collagen bundles by vessels; spindle cells are HHV8+, patients are HIV+ (AJCP 2004;121:335)

Kaposiform hemangioendothelioma: also has slit-like lumina, but they are due to nodules and sheets of compact spindle cells; affects the skin or retroperitoneum of infants and children, may be associated with severe coagulopathy

● Sclerosing hemangioma

● Statis related change

 

End of Soft Tissue Tumors Part 3 - Muscle, Vascular, Nerve, Other > Microvenular hemangioma

 

 

 

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