Background
Generalized lymphatic anomaly (GLA) and Gorham–Stout disease (GSD) are rare complicated lymphatic malformations that occur in multiple body sites and are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Treatment options have been limited, and conventional medical therapies have been generally ineffective. Emerging data suggest a role for sirolimus as a treatment option for complex lymphatic anomalies.
Procedure
Disease response was evaluated by radiologic imaging, quality of life (QOL), and clinical status assessments in children and young adults with GLA and GSD from a multicenter systematic retrospective review of patients treated with oral sirolimus and the prospective phase 2 clinical trial assessing the efficacy and safety of sirolimus in complicated vascular anomalies (NCT00975819). Sirolimus dosing regimens and toxicities were also assessed.
Results
Eighteen children and young adults with GLA (n = 13) or GSD (n = 5) received oral sirolimus. Fifteen patients (83%) had improvement in one or more aspects of their disease (QOL 78%, clinical status 72%, imaging 28%). No patients with bone involvement had progression of bone disease, and the majority had symptom or functional improvement on sirolimus. Improvement of pleural and pericardial effusion(s) occurred in 72% and 50% of affected patients; no effusions worsened on treatment.
Conclusions
Sirolimus appears effective at stabilizing or reducing signs/symptoms of disease in patients with GLA and GSD. Functional impairment and/or QOL improved in the majority of individuals with GLA and GSD with sirolimus treatment.
Complex lymphatic anomalies (CLA) are congenital diseases of the lymphatic circulation system that are associated with significant morbidity and early mortality.While guidelines for the comprehensive evaluation of the CLA were recently published, the diagnostic approach and medical management are not standardized. This article presents the clinical features of four CLA: Gorham-Stout disease, generalized lymphatic anomaly, kaposiform lymphangiomatosis, and central collecting lymphatic anomaly. We also offer three cases from the authors' practice and our views on diagnostic testing and disease management including supportive care, medical therapies, and other interventions.
Vascular anomalies comprise a spectrum of diseases that are broadly classified as tumors and malformations. Diagnosis is often challenging, given a wide range of clinical presentations with overlapping signs and symptoms. Accurate diagnosis is critical to determine prognosis and to generate a management plan, which frequently involves multiple subspecialists during different phases of treatment. An updated classification system provides structure and clear, consistent terminology, allowing for improved diagnosis, provider communication, and collaboration. Historically, treatment of vascular anomalies was primarily surgical and medical therapies were limited or ineffective. Recent discoveries of pharmacologic agents effective in treating vascular anomalies have broadened our medical therapeutic options, limiting the need for unnecessary or high-risk procedures and improving patients' quality of life.
Germline PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homolog) mutations lead to inappropriate cell survival and growth, and a predisposition to multiple cancers. Some patients also have vascular anomalies (VAs), and it is unclear whether these patients have different phenotypes or oncologic risks.We conducted a two-institution retrospective cohort study to better understand the phenotypes of children and young adults with PTEN mutations, and to compare individuals with VA to those without. Almost half of the patients had thyroid tumors and nearly one quarter developed gastrointestinal tumors before 30 years of age. The presence of VA was positively associated with bulky overgrowth but did not appear to modify oncologic risk.
K E Y W O R D Scancer predisposition, overgrowth, PTEN, vascular anomaly, vascular malformation
Background
Slow‐flow vascular malformations (SFVM) are associated with localized intravascular coagulopathy (LIC), which is characterized by elevated D‐dimer and, when severe, hypofibrinogenemia. LIC results in intralesional clotting and hemorrhage and increases risk for significant thrombotic and bleeding complications. Sclerotherapy has been a suggested potential trigger for LIC worsening to disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. Hematologic complications of sclerotherapy in SFVM, along with low‐molecular‐weight heparin (LMWH) used to prevent worsening LIC, are largely unstudied.
Procedure
Medical records of patients with SFVM and LIC who underwent sclerotherapy at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center from July 2008 to December 2016 were reviewed for periprocedural hematologic complications. LMWH dose, frequency, and course length were evaluated.
Results
Fifty‐nine patients with SFVM and LIC underwent 281 sclerotherapy procedures, of which 86% were in children. Eighty‐five percent of patients received periprocedural LMWH, although at various doses and course lengths. No thrombotic complications occurred in children. One adult on LMWH developed pulmonary emboli after sclerotherapy. No major bleeding complications occurred postoperatively. In four patients, fibrinogen dropped below 100 mg/dL post‐sclerotherapy, requiring cryoprecipitate. One patient required packed red blood cell (RBC) transfusion for sclerotherapy‐induced hemolysis. No intraoperative bleeding or thrombotic events occurred.
Conclusion
LMWH use, at subtherapeutic dosing, was common in this patient population and did not appear to increase risk of significant bleeding before, during, or after sclerotherapy. In children with SFVM, bleeding and thrombotic complications after sclerotherapy appear rare. Although safe, prospective studies are needed to evaluate the efficacy of LMWH to prevent worsening coagulopathy with procedures.
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