Kaposiform haemangioendothelioma: magnetic resonance imaging features in 64 cases

5Citations
Citations of this article
11Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Background: Kaposiform haemangioendothelioma (KHE) is a rare, locally aggressive disorder. The presenting and imaging features of KHE can overlap with other vascular anomalies and tumours. We aimed to analyse the imaging findings of KHE disorder and highlight features most suggestive of this diagnosis. Methods: The clinical features and imaging findings were retrospectively reviewed in 64 patients with pathological diagnosis of KHE. Results: Of the 64 patients diagnosed with KHE, 36 patients were < 6 months and 28 patients were ≥ 6 months. The most common presenting features were Kasabach-Merritt phenomenon (KMP, 42.2 %), visible cutaneous lesions (90.6 %), oedema or swelling (43.8 %) and destructive changes or remodelling of adjacent bone (42.2 %). Compared with patients in the group ≥ 6 months, patients in the group < 6 months have higher odds of KMP (P = 0.000), infiltrative lesion with ill-defined borders (P = 0.044). The group ≥ 6 months have higher odds of destructive changes or remodelling of adjacent bone (P = 0.002). In all patients, the lesions in all of the 64 patients were hypointense or isointense compared with muscle on T1-weighted sequences, and hyperintense on T2-weighted or inversion-recovery sequences, nine patients (14.1 %) showed vascularity. There were 28 patients (43.8 %) with characteristic enhancing and infiltrative soft-tissue thickening. Conclusions: Presence of visible cutaneous lesions with ill-defined borders, destructive changes or remodelling of adjacent bone, severe thrombocytopenia and consumptive coagulopathy should favour the diagnosis of KHE.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Peng, S., Xia, C., Yang, K., Chen, S., & Ji, Y. (2021). Kaposiform haemangioendothelioma: magnetic resonance imaging features in 64 cases. BMC Pediatrics, 21(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-021-02573-8

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free