Article Text
Abstract
Primary pulmonary angiosarcoma is a rare type of malignant vascular tumour with poor prognosis. Diagnosis is often late due to non-specific symptoms and low clinical suspicion for angiosarcoma. A 72-year-old man presented to hospital with a 6-month history of mild progressive dyspnoea, with associated cough, episodes of presyncope and weight loss. CT pulmonary angiogram (CTPA) was reported as a large saddle pulmonary embolism extending into both the right and left pulmonary arteries. Further Multidisciplinary team meeting (MDM) discussion, and review of CTPA and subsequent investigations revealed a large primary pulmonary artery sarcoma which was later confirmed histology. The patient was referred to the cardiothoracic surgeons and underwent left radical pneumonectomy.
- lung cancer (oncology)
- respiratory cancer
- pulmonary embolism
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Footnotes
Contributors Dr KR was the lead author of this case report and actively involved in the management of patient.Dr OR was actively involved in the management of patient and contributed in collection of data and drafting of manuscript.Dr AO’B was the consultant involved in the management of patient and finalised the manuscript of case report for submission.
Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.