We present cases of Alveolar Soft Part Sarcoma, one in the upper limb the other in the lower limb, in two young females. Both were treated in the same centre by the same consultant. The first is the case of a 33 year old female with a swelling in the right triceps present for 7 months before presentation to our centre. The time between diagnosis of possible tumour and biopsy was less than a month. Biopsy revealed a trojani grade 2 tumour and there were no metastases prior to wide excision. She received radiotherapy and has no metastases on follow up. Post therapy she is left with neurological pain and a rash on her face after radiotherapy. The second case is that of a 25 year old female presenting, with a swelling in the right thigh, after 12 months including a 6 month history of shortness of breath. She had a family history of pancreatic cancer. Biopsy revealed a trojani grade 3 tumour and imaging revealed lung metastases. She went on to have chemotherapy. She later developed bone metastases.
Two clinic appointments later he was still complaining of pain. X-rays taken at that time showed what appeared to be some evidence of callus formation at the fracture site. Six weeks later he had clinical and radiological signs of what appeared to be “huge callus formation”. He was given a 3 month appointment for what was expected to be a final review. Before his next fracture clinic appointment, however, he became jaundiced and complained about this to his GP who felt it was obstructive jaundice and referred him to the physicians who admitted him to the hospital, and began to investigate him as to the cause of the jaundice. These investigations included an Ultrasound Scan of the abdomen which showed a bulky head of pancreas with biliary and pancreatic ductal dilatation; and a CT scan of the upper abdomen which showed the presence of a cystic mass within the caudate lobe of the liver. Soft tissue vascular encasement around the portal vein and hepatic artery were reported as in keeping with malignant infiltration. Extensive tumour was present within the retroperitoneum involving local vascular structures. He came down to the fracture clinic for his next clinic appointment from the ward. At this point he was very ill, deeply jaundiced and frail. The swelling of the clavicle was the size of a large orange, firm to touch with dilated veins. X-ray at this point showed complete radiological destruction of the medial 1/3 of the left clavicle. At this point palliative care was the mainstay of his management. A week later the chest x-ray report came back as showing collapse of the left upper lobe with whiteout appearance and bulky hilum indicating an underlying bronchogenic carcinoma. Three days later, almost 5 months after initial presentation following a fall, this patient finally succumbed to his disease.
There were no focal neurological signs and lumbar spine movements were normal. However, she did have some pain inhibition in her proximal muscles and difficulty weight bearing in her leg. Lumbar spine x-rays showed grade II spondylolytic spondylolisthesis at L5/S1. MR scan of the lumbar spine confirmed this with some facet joint degeneration. She was sent back for more physiotherapy. Six months later she presented with increasing pain in the right hip and a lump in the right groin. Subsequent MR scan showed a large 20cm x 15cm x 10cm lobulated soft tissue mass within the right obturator space extending through the foramen to lie in the adductor space with infiltration into right hip joint. She had a radical resection but later developed lung metastases.
Significant complications can occur after sarcoma surgeries. Patient should be adequately informed and educated about the complications Surgeon should properly plan his surgery liaising with other specialities Radical excision offers no significant advantage over wide local excision followed by radiotherapy.
Lymph node involvement is a poor prognostic sign While removal of clinically suspicious lymph nodes is reasonable, there appears to be little justification for treating clinically uninvolved draining regional lymph nodes Therapeutic lymph node dissection might be indicated as part of the palliative management The presence of regional lymph node metastasis at any time should be interpreted as an expression of systemic tumour spread and treated palliatively only.
Although the MRI &
biopsy results in this case were reassuring, the clinical scenario of sudden foot drop with increase in pain point more towards a malignant process rather than a benign condition. Some salient points to differentiate the two include that sarcoma have no history of trauma and the duration of symptoms is longer in haematoma than sarcoma. Also, sarcomas usually involve deeper structures while haematoma occur in superficial layers. It should also be noted that several soft tissue sarcoma themselves commonly reveal haemorrhagic or cystic changes. Other differential diagnosis includes myositis ossificans and tumoral calcinosis.