P1345 Tumors metastatic to the heart :Echo, CT, CMR Imaging
Autor: | A Chiampan, L Ghiselli, Laura Lanzoni, Enrico Barbieri, C Dugo, A Anselmi, E Adamo, Stefano Bonapace, A Inno |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Cardiotoxicity
business.industry Echo (computing) Cancer General Medicine Neuroendocrine tumors medicine.disease Pericardial effusion medicine.anatomical_structure Medical imaging medicine Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Interventricular septum Thrombus Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine Nuclear medicine business |
Zdroj: | European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging. 21 |
ISSN: | 2047-2412 2047-2404 |
DOI: | 10.1093/ehjci/jez319.782 |
Popis: | Background The frequency of secondary metastatic tumors has increased over years attributable to increased life expectancy in oncologic patients. Imaging with different methods: echo, CMR, CT and PET can provide noninvasive characterization of cardiac masses. We present 3 cases of cardiac metastasis, different for localization in the heart, pathways of dissemination and relation with neighboring structures. Case 1: a 62-years-old male was admitted to Cardiology department for chest pain and epistaxis. Patient’s medical history was negative for cardiovascular disease. The routine TTE detected a rounded,immobile,intra-myocardial mass (Panel A, fig.1) a the level of the interventricular septum protruding in the LV cavity. The mass was characterized by several anecogenic cavities and echo-contrast showed slight late hyperenhancement of the mass confirming vascularity (fig. 2).CMR gadolinium imaging confirmed late enhancement at the level of the edges of the cavities and in the external border (fig.4). In the suspicion of neuroendocrine tumor, a Gallium-68 dotatate PET/CT was performed with detection of pathological uptake at the abdominal and cardiac level (fig.3). Case 2: a 64-years-old woman presented with shortness of breath, fatigue and weight loss in the past three months. History of smoke was present and diagnosis of non-small cell lung cancer was made. PET-CT demonstrated pathological uptake at pulmonary, limph-nodes, adrenal, hepatic, bone, muscular and pericardial level (Panel B, fig.1).CMR clearly revealed a massive lesion (7x3x3.5 cm) at the level of the LV antero-lateral wall (fig.2) and TTE SAX view (fig.3) confirmed the presence of a large infiltrative immobile mass in the antero-lateral wall. In the same region the pericardium was irregular and thickened suggestive of pericardial tumor involvement. Some degree of pericardial effusion was also present. The ECG was consistent with ST-T elevation in D1 and aVL in absence of ischemic symptoms (fig.4).Case 3: a 78-years-old man known for non-small cell lung cancer underwent transthoracic echo for monitoring cardiotoxicity.Two–chamber TTE showed a intra-myocardial mass in the inferior wall of LV and another rounded mass at the left atrial level (Panel C, fig.1). Chest CT showed the pulmonary mass with irregular borders, intravascular invasion of left lower pulmonary vein (LLPV) and extension into the left atrium (fig.2).2D/3D TEE well demonstrated the atrial invasion by the mass composed by one more echogenic part inside the llpv and outside in the left atrium a rounded head with several region of cystic colliquation (fig.3). Attached to the rounded head irregular protuberances was noted (thrombus?, fig.4). Conclusion: metastasis to the heart and pericardium are much more common than primary cardiac tumors and occur late in the course of malignant disease. Echo is the initial diagnostic test to evaluate for the presence of cardiac metastases. Abstract P1345 Figure. Different cases of cardiac metastasis |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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