Bone: Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma
2014-06-01 Andreas F Mavrogenis  , Andrea Angelini  , Costantino Errani  , Pietro Ruggieri   Affiliation1.First Department of Orthopaedics, Athens University Medical School, ATTIKON University Hospital, Athens, Greece (AFM); Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, Bologna, Italy (AA, CE, PR)
Summary
Note
We consider the name epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of bone for low-grade malignant endothelial vascular neoplasms of bone with tumor cells showing endothelial differentiation, and a biologic behavior between that of hemangioma and angiosarcoma.
Clinics and Pathology
Note
Epidemiology
Clinics
Imaging
The imaging appearance of epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of bone is non-specific. The tumors are purely lytic, poorly marginated with varying degrees of peripheral sclerosis. A soft tissue mass is often associated with less well differentiated tumors. Clustering of multifocal lesions in a single anatomic location suggests the diagnosis of a vascular neoplasm.

Pathology
Micropathology: Microscopically, the tumor is composed of anastomosing cords, solid nests, and strands of endothelial cells that may sometimes form narrow vascular channels. The small capillary-sized tumor vessels can mimic small reactive vessels of granulation tissue. The epithelioid cells tend to have eosinophilic cytoplasm which may show vacuolization and sometimes signet ring-like appearance. The connective tissue stroma shows significant myxoid and hyalinized appearance. The nuclei of the neoplastic cells show varying degrees of pleomorphism and anaplasia.
Although many variants of hemangioendothelioma have been reported, the striking features of growth of epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of bone are the formation of atypical endothelial cells (marked nuclear atypia, mitotic activity, spindling of cells and necrosis) arranged in cords, in greater numbers than required to line the vessels with a simple endothelial membrane, and the formation of vascular tubes with a delicate framework of reticulin fibers with a marked tendency for their lumens to anastomose. On hematoxylin and eosin stains the neoplastic epithelioid endothelial cells are embedded in a hyalinized (deep pink) or chondroid-like (light blue) matrix. No tumor should be considered an epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of bone unless these criteria are present.
Immunophenotype: The endothelial cells uniformly express vimentin and many cells stain with antibodies to Factor VIII, CD31, CD34, and Ulex Europaeus. Epithelioid malignancies may also express cytokeratins and EMA.
Ultrastructure: The endothelial cells contain Weibel-Palade bodies, but are generally difficult to find in poorly differentiated tumors. Cytoplasmic filaments are abundant.

Treatment
Radiation therapy: Adjuvant radiation therapy is advocated to decrease the risk of local recurrence. The risk for postradiation complications should be considered.
Embolization: As a vascular tumor the potential for intraoperative blood loss is significant. To lessen this complication, patients should have an angiographic evaluation and selective embolization when feasible.
Evolution
Prognosis
Genetics
Note
Article Bibliography
| Pubmed ID | Last Year | Title | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15043114 | 2004 | Hemangioendothelioma of the spine. | Aflatoon K et al |
| 24643837 | 2014 | Surgical treatment and results of 62 patients with epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of bone. | Angelini A et al |
| 7397643 | 1980 | Hemangioendothelioma of bone: a study of 29 cases. | Campanacci M et al |
| 22993209 | 2012 | Vascular bone tumors: a proposal of a classification based on clinicopathological, radiographic and genetic features. | Errani C et al |
| 21584898 | 2011 | A novel WWTR1-CAMTA1 gene fusion is a consistent abnormality in epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of different anatomic sites. | Errani C et al |
| 12874764 | 2003 | Vascular tumors of bone: A study of 17 cases other than ordinary hemangioma, with an evaluation of the relationship of hemangioendothelioma of bone to epithelioid hemangioma, epithelioid hemangioendothelioma, and high-grade angiosarcoma. | Evans HL et al |
| 16421750 | 2006 | Subperiosteal hemangioendothelioma of the femur. | Gupta A et al |
| 15877225 | 2005 | Spinal epithelioid hemangioendothelioma with epithelioid angiosarcomatous areas. | Hisaoka M et al |
| 21263239 | 2011 | Pseudomyogenic hemangioendothelioma: a distinctive, often multicentric tumor with indolent behavior. | Hornick JL et al |
| 8898834 | 1996 | Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of bone. | Kleer CG et al |
| 19867151 | 1908 | THE RESULTS OF THE APPLICATION OF SPECIAL HISTOLOGICAL METHODS TO THE STUDY OF TUMORS. | Mallory FB et al |
| 11342784 | 2001 | Translocation t(1;3)(p36.3;q25) is a nonrandom aberration in epithelioid hemangioendothelioma. | Mendlick MR et al |
| 23466575 | 2014 | Primary angiosarcoma of bone: a retrospective analysis of 60 patients from 2 institutions. | Palmerini E et al |
| 527967 | 1979 | The histiocytoid hemangiomas. A unifying concept embracing several previously described entities of skin, soft tissue, large vessels, bone, and heart. | Rosai J et al |
| 17858281 | 1943 | HEMANGIO-ENDOTHELIOMA: A TUMOR OF BLOOD VESSELS FEATURING VASCULAR ENDOTHELIAL CELLS. | Stout AP et al |
| 2430475 | 1986 | Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of bone. A clinicopathologic, ultrastructural, and immunohistochemical study. | Tsuneyoshi M et al |
| 5088217 | 1971 | Hemangioma, hemangiopericytoma, and hemangioendothelioma (angiosarcoma) of bone. | Unni KK et al |
| 7200731 | 1982 | Hemangioendothelial sarcoma of bone. | Wold LE et al |
Citation
Andreas F Mavrogenis ; Andrea Angelini ; Costantino Errani ; Pietro Ruggieri
Bone: Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma
Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. 2014-06-01
Online version: http://atlasgeneticsoncology.org/solid-tumor/5617/new-content/tumors-explorer/
