1 patient, a 55-year-old Japanese woman with a solitary pulmonary capillary hemangioma presenting as a mixed ground-glass opacity.
Video-assisted thoracic surgery wedge resection and frozen section diagnosis.
Pathological diagnosis and features on frozen section.
Frozen section analysis can identify the benign nature of solitary pulmonary capillary hemangioma, aiding in its differentiation from early lung cancers during surgery.
Solitary pulmonary capillary hemangioma (SPCH) is a rare benign lung tumor that must be distinguished from small and early lung cancers. Here, we report a case of SPCH for which we performed frozen section diagnosis. The patient was a 55-year-old Japanese woman. Five years before the operation, mixed ground-glass opacity was detected by computed tomography in the left posterior basal segment of the lower lobe (S10). Because the interior tumor density of the ground-glass opacity increased slightly, video-assisted thoracic surgery wedge resection was performed. Frozen section diagnosis revealed a benign tumor without proliferation of atypical epithelial cells. The tumor had narrow alveolar lumens, thickened alveolar septa and a clear boundary separating it from normal lung tissue. The proliferated lumens varied in size and were lined with single layers of flat cells. After the operation, immunohistochemical staining of a paraffin section revealed that the thickened alveolar septa resulted from the proliferation of capillary vessels, the flat cells of which were positive for CD31 and CD34 and negative for podoplanin; the tumor was diagnosed as SPCH. Here, we discuss the pathological features of SPCH on frozen sections with reference to this case and review previous related reports.
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Tetsuya Isaka
Tomoyuki Yokose
Hiroyuki Ito
Pathology International
Yokohama City University
Kanagawa Cancer Center
Kanagawa Prefectural Hospital Organization
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Isaka et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d57433def4cefba5c22a97 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/pin.12120
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