Cutaneous angiosarcoma and atypical vascular lesions of the skin and breast after radiation therapy for breast carcinoma Journal Article


Authors: Fineberg, S.; Rosen, P. P.
Article Title: Cutaneous angiosarcoma and atypical vascular lesions of the skin and breast after radiation therapy for breast carcinoma
Abstract: Despite the widespread use of radiation therapy to treat breast carcinoma, angiosarcomas arising in the field of radiation therapy are rare. The authors studied three patients with cutaneous angiosarcoma and four patients with atypical vascular lesions (AVL). All had breast conserving surgery, axillary lymph node dissection, and radiation therapy for breast carcinoma. Six patients received conventional high energy postoperative doses of external beam radiation therapy to the breast. Details of radiation therapy were not available for one angiosarcoma patient. Angiosarcoma was diagnosed 3.5 years, 3.7 years, and 5.25 years after radiotherapy. The three angiosarcoma were multifocal or diffuse and high grade, solid cellular foci located mainly in the dermis. In three patients AVL presented as discrete skin nodules (2 unifocal and 1 multifocal) and in one patient as a breast mass. The four AVL consisted of focal proliferation of dilated vascular spaces lined predominantly by a single layer of plump and sometimes hyperchromatic endothelial cells. After two angiosarcoma patients underwent mastectomy, one died 10 months after diagnosis with recurrent local angiosarcoma and the other is alive without angiosarcoma 2 months after diagnosis. One angiosarcoma patient died of unrelated causes 2 weeks after diagnosis. One AVL patient developed a second cutaneous AVL in the axillary region 17 months after excision of an AVL from the same area. None of the AVL patients has developed angiosarcoma or recurrent mammary carcinoma. They remain well 10 months, 18 months, 7 years and 7 months, and 10 years, respectively, after initial local excision. The authors conclude that cutaneous angiosarcoma and unusual benign cutaneous vascular lesions can develop within the field of radiation therapy for breast cancer. Unlike other radiation therapy-induced sarcomas, cutaneous angiosarcoma often occurs within a short time interval after radiotherapy. It is important to distinguish AVL from angiosarcoma. Longer follow-up will be necessary to fully characterize the prognostic importance of atypical vascular lesions, but currently there is no evidence that they represent a precursor to radiation-induced angiosarcoma.
Keywords: adult; clinical article; human tissue; aged; histopathology; cancer radiotherapy; combined modality therapy; follow up; follow-up studies; lymph node dissection; skin neoplasms; mastectomy; angiosarcoma; breast neoplasms; hemangiosarcoma; skin tumor; neoplasms, radiation-induced; breast carcinoma; carcinoma; radiation therapy; second cancer; vascular lesion; radiation carcinogenesis; middle age; vascular diseases; human; female; priority journal; article; atypical vascular lesions; breast preserving surgery; mammary skin
Journal Title: American Journal of Clinical Pathology
Volume: 102
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0002-9173
Publisher: Oxford University Press  
Date Published: 1994-12-01
Start Page: 757
End Page: 763
Language: English
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 7801888
DOI: 10.1093/ajcp/102.6.757
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 14 January 2019 -- Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Paul P Rosen
    201 Rosen