3.2.6 Hemangioma

Grading & Level of Importance: B

ICD-11

XH5AW4

Synonyms

Infantile haemangioma, strawberry nevus, hemangioma of infancy (HI).

Epidemiology

Relatively frequent (4-5% of infants).

Definition

Benign vascular tumours that appear in the first weeks after birth.

Aetiology & Pathogenesis

Unknown but has been discussed.

Signs & Symptoms

Dome-shaped circumscribed bright red nodules (cutaneous haemangioma), or pink to blue soft swelling (subcutaneous haemangioma), or both (mixed type) or superficial.

Localisation

They can be located in any area of the body.

Read more

They can be located in any area of the body, but hemangioma more frequently occur on face, scalp, chest or back. Pattern can be focal, multifocal, segmental or indeterminate.

Classification

Superficial (cutaneous), deep (subcutaneous) or mixed (superficial and deep).

Read more

Haemangiomas are superficial (cutaneous), deep (subcutaneous) or mixed (superficial and deep). Other categories are reticular, abortive, and minimal growth.

Laboratory & other workups

Laboratory tests are not needed.

Dermatopathology

Histology is not needed for the diagnosis. A proliferation of dermal mature vessels without inflammatory infiltrate is observed if a biopsy is performed. However, growing HI express more GLU-1 receptor by immunohistochemistry. This should prompt the clinician to  consider intervention.

Course

Childhood haemangiomas are not present at birth, appear in the first weeks of life, grow during a few months and then spontaneously regress in the first or first years of life. Those which are rapidly and continuously growing need intervention.

Clinical Presentation


Complications

Ulceration (infection, pain), scar with esthetic consequences, bleeding (uncommon). Depending on hemangioma location:


Eye: amblyopia


Nose: cartilage deformation 


Lips: feeding difficulties 


Lower jaw: associated subglottic hemangioma with possible stridor and respiratory obstruction


Segmentary facial hemangiomas and perineal/lombo-sacral hemangiomas may be associated with underlying malformations (rare); miliary hemangiomatosis may be associated with visceral hemangiomas and high output cardiac insufficiency (rare).

Read more

Childhood haemangiomas may lead to: ulceration (infection, pain), scar with esthetic consequences, bleeding (uncommon), functional disturbances depending on location:

  • Eye: amblyopia

  • Nose: cartilage deformation

  • Lips, mouth: feeding difficulties

  • Lower jaw and neck: associated subglottic hemangioma (with possible respiratory obstruction)

  • Segmentary facial hemangiomas and perineal/lumbo-sacral hemangiomas may be associated with underlying malformations.

PHACE association/syndrome includes posterior fossa malformations, hemangioma, arterial anomalies, cardiovascular anomalies, eye anomalies, sternal clefting and ⁄ or supra-umbilical raphe.

LUMBAR (SACRAL, PELVIS) association / syndrome includes lower body hemangioma, urogenital anomalies, ulceration, myelopathy, bony deformities, ano-rectal malformations, arterial anomalies, and renal anomalies.

inally, miliary hemangiomatosis is a rare condition which may be associated with visceral hemangiomas and high output cardiac insufficiency.

Diagnosis

Most cases: clinical. Diagnostic uncertainty: ultrasonography. Suspicious subglottic hemangioma: referral to ENT (ear-nose-throat) specialist. Suspicious PHACES or PELVIS syndrome: brain or medullary MRI, respectively. Glut-1 staining.

Read more

Diagnosis is, in the vast majority of cases, based on clinical features. In case of diagnostic uncertainty, an ultrasonography could be performed (differential diagnosis: vascular malformations, other tumours). Referral to ENT (ear-nose-throat) specialist should be considered in case of suspicious subglottic hemangioma (lower jaw hemangioma, stridor).

A brain or medullary MRI should be performed in case of suspicious PHACES or PELVIS syndrome, respectively. GLUT-1 staining may be helpful for the diagnosis

Differential Diagnosis

Differential diagnoses include vascular malformations (such as: nevus flammeus), granuloma pyogenicum, angiosarcoma, other malignant tumors (rhabdomyosarcoma, infantile fibrosarcoma). Kasabach-Merritt syndrome is characterized by profound thrombocytopenia, consumptive coagulopathy with a hemorrhagic risk, in association with vascular tumors (rare).

Read more

Differential diagnoses include numerous entities.

Congenital hemangioma include rapidly involuting congenital hemangioma (RICH), sometimes associated with thrombocytopenia and/or consumptive coagulopathy, non-involuting congenital hemangioma (NICH), and partially involuting congenital hemangioma (PICH). Causal genes are GNAQ/GNA11.

Tufted angioma may also be associated with thrombocytopenia and/or consumptive coagulopathy. Tufted angioma and kaposiform hemangioendothelioma are part of a spectrum. Causal gene is GNA14. Other types of benign vascular tumors are spindle-cell hemangioma (causal genes IDH1/IDH2), epithelioid hemangioma (causal gene FOS), and pyogenic granuloma, also known as lobular capillary hemangioma (causal genes BFAF/RAS/GNA14).

Kasabach-Merritt syndrome is a rare condition characterized by profound and sustained thrombocytopenia, with profound hypofibrinogenemia, consumptive coagulopathy and elevated D-dimers, with a hemorrhagic risk, in association with vascular tumors (especially kaposiform hemangioendothelioma or tufted angioma).

Other rare types of benign vascular tumors are hobnail hemangioma, microvenular hemangioma, anastomosing hemangioma, glomeruloid hemangioma, papillary hemangioma, intravascular papillary endothelial hyperplasia, cutaneous epithelioid angiomatous nodule, acquired elastotic hemangioma, and littoral cell hemangioma of the spleen.

Differential diagnoses also include capillary malformations: nevus simplex/salmon patch, cutaneous and/or mucosal capillary malformations (also known as port-wine stain), including non-syndromic capillary malformations, capillary malformations with central nervous system and/or ocular anomalies (Sturge-Weber syndrome), capillary malformations with bone and/or soft tissue overgrowth and diffuse capillary malformation with overgrowth, reticulate capillary malformation and cutis marmorata telangiectica congenita.

Finally, infantile haemangioma must be differentiated from malignant vascular tumors (angiosarcoma, and epithelioid hemangioendothelioma), and from locally aggressive or borderline vascular tumors (including kaposiform hemangioendothelioma, retiform hemangioendothelioma, papillary intralymphatic angioendothelioma, composite hemangioendothelioma, pseudomyogenic hemangioendothelioma, polymorphous hemangioendothelioma, hemangioendothelioma not otherwise specified, and Kaposi sarcoma).

Kasabach-Merritt syndrome is a rare condition characterized by profound thrombocytopenia, consumptive coagulopathy with a hemorrhagic risk, in association with vascular tumors (especially kaposiform hemangioendothelioma or tufted angioma).

Prevention & Therapy

In most cases: no treatment. In case of complications related to localization or rapid growth: beta-blockers (propranolol).

Read more

Because of the spontaneous regression, therapy is generally not needed. In severe cases of childhood haemangioma or based on cosmetic demand, systemic (or sometimes topical) propranolol (beta- blocker) is now used as first line treatment.

Special

Aggressive early treatment (laser) may be needed in fast growing lesions in anatomical risky localisations (i.e. eyes), however, in this situation, systemic ß-blocker administration as an inpatient may be required.

Further images icon

Further images / DOIA

Comments

Be the first one to leave a comment