The patient is a 17-year-old girl, nonsmoker, who presented 1 year previously with a spontaneous pneumothorax. She failed conservative therapy and underwent pleurodesis procedures twice. Open-lung biopsy demonstrated pulmonary lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM), and a computed tomography (CT) study at another institution showed a left suprarenal mass.
Prepared by
Michael Matchette, 2LT USAFR MSC
, Department of Radiology & Nuclear Medicine, and
Douglas P. Beall, MAJ USAF MC
, Assistant Professor of Radiology, The Uniformed Services
University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD; and
Kurtis R. Kendell, MD
, Department of Radiology, The Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
CASE SUMMARY
The patient is a 17-year-old girl, nonsmoker, who presented 1
year previously with a spontaneous pneumothorax. She failed
conservative therapy and underwent pleurodesis procedures twice.
Open-lung biopsy demonstrated pulmonary lymphangioleiomyomatosis
(LAM), and a computed tomography (CT) study at another institution
showed a left suprarenal mass. The histologic and
immunohistochemical examination from a retroperitoneal biopsy were
consistent with a lymphangiomyoma. No skin lesions were present and
there was no family history of tuberous sclerosis, seizures, or
mental deficiency.
DIAGNOSIS
Pulmonary lymphangioleiomyomatosis with retro-peritoneal
lymphangiomyoma.
DISCUSSION
Lymphangioleiomyomatosis is a rare disease that occurs almost
exclusively in women of reproductive age. Although the etiology of
the disease is unknown, it is hypothesized that it may be related
to the amplifying effect on mutant proteins by exogenous estrogen
or pregnancy.
1
The main feature of the disease is the abnormal proliferation of
immature smooth muscle at the level of the distal airway, small
blood vessels, and lung lymphatic system, including the mediastinal
and retroperitoneal lymphatic system
2
and thoracic duct.
3
The most common clinical symptoms at initial presentation are
thoracic in nature and include exertional dyspnea, spontaneous
pneumothorax, and chylothorax.
4
The characteristic clinical findings are probably due to the
proliferation of the atypical smooth muscle cells that obstruct
bronchioles, lymphatics, and venules
5
and cystic dilatation caused by matrix metalloproteinases produced
by LAM.
6
Many patients do not live more than 10 years from the initial
diagnosis, and treatment is controversial, although hormone therapy
(directed at progesterone receptors on spindle cells),
oophorectomy, and lung transplantation may offer some benefit.
7
Chest radiographs may be normal initially. The earliest findings
usually consist of an interstitial infiltrate with several
different appearances that has been described as lymphangitic;
soft, reticular, or accentuated at the bases; fine nodular; and
septal.
8
Eventually, an interstitial infiltrate associated with airflow
obstruction, air trapping, and hyperinflation is usually seen. A
study of 39 women with biopsy-proven LAM found a decreased FEV
1
, FEV
1
/FVC, and DLCO.
9
Cysts and bullae are common and eventually honeycomb lung develops.
10
In recent years many authors have been exploring the benefit of
CT in the diagnosis of LAM. In a study of 69 patients, Urban et al
5
found that all the patients had characteristic bilateral
thin-walled cysts. After radiographic chest evaluation of 39 women
with LAM, Avila et al
9
found additional cysts on 92% of thin-section CT scans. Kirchner et
al
11
supported the characteristic appearance of LAM on high-resolution
CT. In 11 women with open-biopsyproven LAM they universally found
multiple, thin-walled cysts uniformly distributed throughout the
lung.
11
Although they also found interstitial changes in most of their
patients, they concluded that the cystic changes described are
almost pathognomonic for LAM. In a separate study of 80 women with
biopsy-proven LAM, Avila et al
12
found that 76% of the patients also had positive findings on
abdominal CT or ultrasound. The most common findings were renal
angiomyolipomas (AMLs), enlarged abdominal lymph nodes, chylous
ascites, and lymphangiomyomas.
12
In a study of 22 women with known extrapulmonary involvement of
LAM, Matsui et al
6
found that 68% of them were AMLs. Other studies have reported AMLs
in up to two thirds of patients with LAM at initial presentation.
13
A single paper describes ultrasound findings in diffuse
retroperitoneal lymphangiomyomatosis. They found multiple anechoic
cystic structures, irregular in shape, thin walled, with
intraluminal septa, and associated enlarged nodes. These findings,
in diffuse lymphangiomyomatosis, represent multiple ectatic
lymphatic vessels.
14
There is a varied spectrum to the disease depending on the
degree of intra-and extrapulmonary involvement. This led one group
of authors
15
to divide the extrapulmonary LAM into three groups: 1) pulmonary
parenchymal LAM with diffuse mediastinal and or retroperitoneal
involvement; 2) localized mediastinal or retroperitoneal LAM
without pulmonary parenchymal involvement; and 3) pulmonary
parenchymal and lymph node disease in patients with stigmata of
tuberous sclerosis.
8
The first two categories of involvement are extremely rare, each
consisting of approximately four reported case studies. The case
described here reports pulmonary involvement with localized
retro-peritoneal involvement.
In the English literature, LAM has been strongly associated with
renal angiomyolipomas. Angiomyolipoma can also occur as a component
of the tuberous sclerosis complex. Lymphangioleiomyomatosis has
long been suspected to be related to angiomyolipoma and tuberous
sclerosis because of clinical associations. Many cytological
features, morpho-logical characteristics, and immunophenotypic
profiles all support a close relationship between LAM and
angiomyolipoma, which probably represent different morphological
manifestations of ham-artomatous proliferation of a particular form
of HMB-45 positive smooth muscle.
16
The pathology of the lung in LAM and tuberous sclerosis appears
identical histologically. Since renal angiomyolipomas and
extrapulmonary lymphangiomas have been found in both, some authors
have suggested that LAM is a form fruste of tuberous sclerosis.
8
The largest study of LAM evaluated 80 women without tuberous
sclerosis from 1995 to 1998 using thin-section CT and ultrasound.
Only four women were found to have a localized retroperitoneal
lymp-hangiomyoma as seen in this case.
12
CONCLUSION
It is clear that LAM is highly associated with a variety of
benign extrapulmonary tumors, especially AMLs, lymphangiolipomas,
and enlarged lymph nodes. A classic presentation on CT or MRI and a
high index of suspicion for these lesions in a woman with known LAM
could avoid the risks of unnecessary surgery for a suspected
malignancy. In a presentation such as this case of a
retroperitoneal lymphangiomyoma, methods of acquiring information
that are less invasive than surgical biopsy should be considered.
These lesions are often amenable to image-guided biopsy if the
etiology of an extrapulmonary mass in a patient with LAM is
uncertain. In this case, a lymphangiomyoma was the suspected
diagnosis but because of patient concern and the lack of a
well-defined relationship between LAM and benign retroperitoneal
masses, a needle-guided biopsy was performed.
Several studies in the last several years have included women
with LAM who were not diagnosed by pulmonary biopsy. These studies
relied on imaging techniques, biopsy of extrapulmonary lesions, and
clinical presentation to make the diagnosis of pulmonary LAM in a
minority of their patients. Specifically, they looked for the
characteristic thin-walled cysts on chest CT and at least one of
the following: unexplained recurrent pneumothoraces or hemoptysis,
biopsy-proven AML or lymphangiomyoma, persistent chylothorax, or
transbronchial biopsy that was suspicious for but not diagnostic of
LAM. Given the recent information, which has further established
the relationship between LAM and benign mediastinal and
retroperitoneal masses, it may now be possible to establish an
imaging diagnosis of a retroperitoneal AML in a patient with
biopsy-proven LAM and thereby avoid exposing the patient to the
inherent risks of an invasive procedure. Provided that the
appropriate imaging characteristics are present, it may be time
that retroperitoneal masses in patients with LAM could be diagnosed
as benign with a high degree of certainty without exposing the
patient to any potential morbidity associated with a biopsy of the
mass.