Symptoms & Causes
Introduction
Tufted angioma (TA) and kaposiform haemangioendothelioma (KHE) are vascular tumors in children, with TA being superficial and KHE deeper, both implicated in platelet-trapping syndrome Kasabach–Merritt phenomenon (KMP).
Reference
WHO Classification of Tumours Editorial Board. Soft tissue and bone tumours [Internet]. Lyon (France): International Agency for Research on Cancer; 2020 [cited 2024 09 11]. (WHO classification of tumours series, 5th ed.; vol. 3). Available from: https://tumourclassification.iarc.who.int/chapters/33.
Related Terminology
Not recommended: Kaposi-like infantile haemangioendothelioma; haemangioma with Kaposi-like features; angioblastoma of Nakagawa.
Subtype(s)
None
Symptoms
Cutaneous forms are violaceous, infiltrative patches/plaques that may develop nodularity. Deeper soft tissue lesions are bulging indurated masses. Congenital/early infantile cases, especially when large, commonly present with profound thrombocytopenia (KMP). MRI shows an ill-defined, diffusely enhancing T2-hyperintense mass involving multiple tissue layers.
Localization
TA and KHE most commonly affect the skin and deep soft tissues of the extremities, head and neck, trunk, and retroperitoneum; less commonly, the mediastinum, spleen, bone, and testis are affected.
Epidemiology
Most cases present in children aged < 5 years; some are congenital. Congenital/early infantile tumors cause most KMP cases. Rare cases present in older children and adults, without KMP. There is no sex or racial predilection.
Etiology
Unknown