Pelvic Multifocal Primitive Bone Epithelioid Angiosarcoma ( Iliac Crest and Hip ) about One Case and Literature Review

Epithelioid angiosarcoma is a rare vascular tumour with dark prognosis at short term. The primitive bone localization is exceptional and sometimes presents itself under a unifocal form. We report a clinical case of pelvic multifocal primitive bone epithelioid angiosarcoma (iliac crest and hip) diagnosed on a young male adult (45 years old). The radiological investigations put in evidence geographic osteolytic lesions (type IC) and, diagnostic was given thanks to the histological examination of the surgical biopsy pieces. The evolution was marked by the appearance of pulmonary and lymph node metastases with a death occurring in less than 4 months. Extremely rare tumour, bone epithelioid angiosarcoma is a variant of angiosarcoma characterised by an aggressive nature whose evolution is always fatal. Through this observation we report our experience on the diagnostic approach; and using a literature review we discuss the therapeutic modalities of this tumour with very bad prognosis.


Introduction
Epithelioid angiosarcoma is a rare vascular tumour (1% of soft tissues sarcomas) [1] [2].Most of these tumours are primitive [3].It is sometimes described at the level of soft tissues (liver, lung), and can affect the osseous tissue.The bone localization sometimes described has a metastatic origin; bone primitive damage is exceptional.It is a highly malignant tumor whose symptoms are not specific but How to cite this paper: Koné, S., Coulibaly, A., Ngandeu, N.A., N'dah, K.J., Touré, S., Bana, A., Agoh, S. and Kouakou, N. S. Koné et al. the pain dominates the clinical picture, followed by the appearance of a swelling and a rapid clinical evolution.The radiological aspect is the most frequent, that it is a lytic image, poorly limited with extension in the adjacent soft tissues.The most frequent radiological aspect is a lytic image, poorly limited with extension in the adjacent soft tissues.
CT scan and MRI complete the standard radiography, specifying the tumor's bone limits, in particular the cortical damage, as well as the invasion of the surrounding soft tissues.
The diagnostic is essentially histological and or immunohistochemical.At the histological plane, the angiosarcoma is characterised by a high degree of anaplasia.The malignant bone hemangioendothelioma is composed of anastomosing vascular ducts lined with atypical endothelial cells with enlarged nuclei, prominent nucleoli and increased mitoses.Inflammatory (eosinophilic) cells may be present.
However, the histological diagnosis is not free of difficulties because of the similarity with other bone tumors (primitive vascular or osteophytic cancer metastasis).
The complete surgical resection (treatment of choice) has to be coupled to radiotherapy.Occasionally, adjuvant chemotherapy is decided but has not proven to be effective.
Epithelioid angiosarcoma has a very high malignant potential [3] [4], so with an aggressive evolution with most of the time metastases.The sites of choice for metastasis are bone, lung and lymph nodes.
The prognosis is dark at short term.We report a clinical case of pelvic multifocal primitive bone epithelioid angiosarcoma (iliac crest and hip) diagnosed on a young male adult.

Case Report
Mr. A. T., 45 years old, admitted in the rheumatology ward for a left low back pain and alteration of the general body state.The disease history reveals a beginning started 8 months before his admission, by the appearance of a left mechanic low back pain, without irradiation, calmed by the usual analgesics.Progressively, this pain took a permanent inflammatory character with an increase in intensity and an extension to the ipsilateral hip, creating a mobility limitation.An absolute functional impotence appeared after a fall of its height.
The physical examination found a major general body state alteration, a pain at 9 on 10 on the visual analog pain scale.On the left hip, we noticed a hip vicious attitudein flexum, a greater tronchanteric pain with an impossible hip mobilisation.The Larrey and Verneuil maneuver was positive.There were no other extra articular signs.The other apparatus looked without any particularities.
The past medical history noticed a tuberculosis contact 4 years before the signs beginning.There was no notion of particular exposition or irradiation.
The radiological report shows a type IC Lodwick [5] osteolytic lesion at the level of the femoral neck (Figure 1) and the iliac wings and cortical rupture (Figure 2).A radiologic exploration (thoracic and abdomino-pelvic TDM, gastrointestinal endoscopy) to research a metastatic carcinoma or another localization was negative.The tumour markers (alpha-fetoprotein, carcino-embyonic antigen, prostatic specific antigen) were normal.
A surgical biopsy was performed after an anterior approach of the hip and provisional filling by a spacer.Pathologic examination suggests the diagnosis of grade 3 epithelioid angiosarcoma of the FNCLCCL (Figure 3) [6].
A multidisciplinary consultation (surgeon, rheumatologist, oncologist, and histopathologist) to make a choice of indication and therapeutic protocol was conducted.Unfortunately patient died of the disease 4 months after diagnosis in a major alteration of general body condition with pulmonary and ganglionic metastases.

Discussion
The primitive bone angiosarcoma is a rare tumour representing less than 1% of primitive malignant bone tumours (PMBT) [1] [2].Epithelioid angiosarcoma is an angiosarcoma variant, characterized by a bad differentiation and biological aggressiveness.The primitive bone localization is exceptional.These tumours can occur in different part of the bone, but the predilection site is long bone extremities [1]- [8].Other sites have been reported: pelvis [9], and spine [4].In our case it was a multifocal damage of the pelvis (iliac crest) and the femur neck.
Our patient age was 45 years whereas the median age of bone angiosarcoma reported in the literature varies between 60 up to 71 years [7] [8].Men incidence is slightly higher than that of women [3] [9].
Patients may have a unifocal or multifocal bone lesion [3] [10] as was the case in our patient.
Bone metastatic cancer's biological markers negativityconfirms the primitive pelvic origin.In case of multifocal lesions, the difficulty is to know if this last is synchronous in a multiple form or the result of metastases [11].Apart from these primary forms, secondary angiosarcoma has been reported in patients with overweight status [12], following prosthetic implant [13], or irradiation (radiotherapy) [14].On our patient, no risk factor has been identified.Many authors precise that the angiosarcoma radiological signs are not specific [3] [9] [15].They are summarized in a geographic osteolysis with blurred limit of type IC [5] which because of its aggressiveness and its rapidity of extension no periosteal reaction does have time to settle.The tomodensitometry is effective to evaluate tumour limits, bone lyses, calcification matrix and periosteal appositions.The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is fundamental to evaluate the locoregional extension (osseous, soft tissues, vascular structures, skip metastasis).This osteolysis usually involves bone metastatic carcinomas (osteophytic cancer) or PMBT (Chondrosarcoma, osteosarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma, leiomyosarcoma); and less often primary osseous vascular tumours.
The diagnosis of epithelioid angiosarcoma is exclusively anatomopathological, which must be carried out by an anatomopathologist experienced in oncology.
Indeed, bone metastatic carcinoma can be difficult to distinguish from epithelioid angiosarcoma because it is also composed of epithelioid type tumour cells [17] [18].
On the other hand, it is necessary to eliminate epithelial-like tumours (haemangioma, epithelioid haemangioma or epithelioid hemangio-endothelioma) due to histological similarities with epithelioid angiosarcoma [18].
The certitude diagnostic is provided by histological examination of the biopsy pieces.
Nowadays, thanks to immunohistochemical marking processes, we can separate a primitive tumour of the bone and a bone metastasis; and alsodifferentiate the primary vascular tumours of bone.
We did not have immunohistochemistry, we made the diagnosis on the basis of clusters arguments.The clinical and biologicalarguments were: alteration of the general state, absence of primary osteophylic cancer site, negativity of biological markers for primary cancer.The radiological arguments were based on osteolysis with blurred limit, cortical rupture, calcification or partition absence.
On the histological plan there were epithelioid cells bordering the cavities, cytonuclear atypia , with a high mitotic index, and sometimes cytoplasmic vacuoles which contain red blood cells.
The therapeutic management of PMBT seems well codified.Treatment of bone angiosarcoma typically involves a carcinological surgery (monoblock excision) in combination with radiotherapy and or chemotherapy [20].
Surgically it consists in a complete surgical resection associated with various complex reconstruction procedures.All are unanimous that it is a difficult, heavy, hemorrhagic surgery, which requires a team used to practice.Radiotherapy is proposed in adjuvant method and allows a local and late control with good functional and cosmetic results [3] [21] [22] at short term because the prognosis of this tumour is dark.Neo adjuvant chemotherapy indicated in multifocal lesions or metastasis has not yet proved its efficacy on overall survival.Table 1.Immunohistochemical expression of markers depending on the type of tumor (+ positive, − negative).

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.Pelvis X-ray (A) antero-posterior; Pelvis CT scan; (B) sagittal; (C) coronal showing: osteolytic lesion at the level of the femoral neck (arrow in yellow) and the iliac wings (arrow in red).

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. Pelvis CT scan, reconstruction (A) a front view; (B) a view from below showing: osteolytic lesion at the level of the femoral neck (arrow in yellow) and the iliac wings (arrow in red).