Joint Program in Nuclear Medicine
PET Imaging of Pulmonary Artery Sarcoma
Hossein Jadvar, MD, PhD
J. Anthony Parker, MD, PhD
September 29, 1998
Presentation
A 58 year old female was admitted to the hospital for further evaluation
of cough, weight loss, and hemoptysis. Previous work-up revealed a right
hilar mass. A bone scan and a head MRI were negative. A lung scan showed
a ventilation perfusion mismatch in the right lower lobe, and the patient
was anticoagulated. On admission the physical examination was normal except
for tachypnea (respiratory rate of 23/min.) and tachycardia (heart rate
of 95/min.). An MRI of the chest and a fluorodexoyglucose (FDG) PET scan
were obtained.
Imaging Technique
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Lung scan: Ventilation scan in the posterior projection was performed with
Xe-133 gass followed by an 8 view perfusion scan.
-
Chest MRI: Axial T1, sagittal T1 and coronal 3D FISP images were obtained
post-gadolinium injection.
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FDG PET: Coincidence imaging was performed 1.5 hours after intravenous
injection of F-18 labelled FDG in the fasting state.
Imaging Findings
-
Lung scan: The perfusion scan shows decreased perfusion
in the right lung particularly the right lower lobe (arrows
show defect). Single breath image from the ventilation
scan (left) shows normal ventilation in the region of abnormal perfusion
(right). Arrows show the area of mismatch.
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FDG PET and MRI: Axial images show a hypermetabolic
lesion in the right hilum (FDG PET on left) and an ill-defined right hilar
mass abutting right pulmonary artery at its bifurcation (MRI on right).
Arrows
on the axial images show the mass.
Coronal images
show that the hypermetabolic region (FDG PET on left) is associated intraluminal
filling defect (MRI on right).
Arrows on the
coronal images show the mass. Not shown were peripheral embolic disease,
and scattered 1 cm lymph nodes.
Differential Diagnosis
-
The most common cause of a ventilation perfusion mismatch is pulmonary
embolization; however, any cause of pulmonary artery obstruction can produce
the same findings. The differential diagnosis also includes bronchogenic
carcinoma, lymphoma, metastatic disease, sarcoma, aneurysm, sarcoid, and
fungal or granulomatous infection.
-
However, the hypermetabolic nature of the right hilar mass makes pulmonary
embolization unlikely.
Diagnosis
The patient underwent right thoracotomy and right pneumonectomy. The surgical
specimen revealed a pulmonary artery sarcoma.
Discussion
Background:
Pulmonary artery sarcoma is a rare neoplasm that arises from the central
pulmonary arteries. The most common site for metastases is the lung. It
is more common in females (2:1 female:male ratio) in the age range 22 to
81 years (1). The signs and symptoms include systolic murmur, cyanosis,
dyspnea, chest pain, cough, hemoptysis, and syncope. The clinical presentation
and radiologic features may mimic pulmonary embolism due to pulmonary arterial
flow reduction (2). Some patients are therefore treated with anticoagulation
which may not result in the resolution of symptoms. When tumor is suspected,
surgery can be both diagnostic and therapeutic. The prognosis, however,
is very poor with a mean survival of about one year after the onset of
symptoms (3).
Radiologic Imaging:
The radiographic features include decreased pulmonary vascular markings,
central pulmonary artery enlargement, or a hilar mass (4). CT or MRI may
show expansion of the pulmonary artery by a soft tissue mass which may
be associated with regional or global ipsilateral lung oligemia, pulmonary
infarction, or peripheral pulmonary nodules (5, 6). One case report also
demonstrated the neoplasm as an intravascular echogenic mass with right
ventricular strain on 2D-echocardiography (7).
Scintigraphic Imaging:
Lung scan may be performed in these patients due to similarity of the clinical
presentation to pulmonary embolism. Mismatched diminished perfusion abnormalities
on the lung scan may suggest high likelihood ratio for pulmonary embolism.
In one case report, gallium-67 scan was useful in identifying the tumor
(8).
FDG PET Imaging:
There are no previous reports of the use of FDG PET imaging, either with
a dedicated PET camera or a gamma camera with coincidence circuitry, for
the evaluation of pulmonary artery sarcoma. In our patient, the tumor was
clearly hypermetabolic which was highly suspicious for malignancy. Tumor
was confirmed by surgical pathology.
Conclusion:
FDG PET is useful for the evaluation of patients with a hilar mass who
may have initially been unsuccessfully treated for pulmonary embolism.
Malignancy including pulmonary artery sarcoma should be considered if the
mass is hypermetabolic.
References
-
Baker PB, et al: Pulmonary artery sarcoma. Arch Pathol Lab Med 1985; 109:35-39.
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Delany SG, et al: Pulmonary artery sarcoma mimicking pulmonary embolism.
Chest 1993; 103(5): 1631-1633.
-
Britton PD. Primary pulmonary artery sarcoma-A report of two cases, with
special emphasis on the diagnostic problems. Clin Radiol 1990; 41: 92-94.
-
Moffat RE, et al. Roentgen considerations in primary pulmonary artery sarcoma.
Radiology 1972; 104: 283-288.
-
Fitzgerald PM. Primary sarcoma of the pulmonary trunk: CT findings. J Comput
Assist Tomogr 1983; 7: 521-523.
-
Smith et al: MR and CT findings in pulmonary artery sarcoma. J Comput Assist
Tomogr 1989; 13(5): 906-909.
-
Wright EC, et al: Primary pulmonary artery sarcoma diagnosed noninvasively
by two-dimensional echocardiography. Circulation 1983; 67(2): 459-462.
-
Myerson PJ, et al: Gallium imaging in pulmonary artery sarcoma mimicking
pulmonary embolism: case report. J Nucl Med 1976; 17(10): 893-895.
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J. Anthony Parker, MD PhD, Tony_Parker@bidmc.harvard.edu