Abstract
Purpose:
To report a rare case of hemangiosarcoma after endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR).
Case Report:
A 50-year-old man with Klinefelter syndrome presented 5 years after EVAR with a mass at the infrarenal aorta outside the stent-graft. Radiomorphologic and clinical signs were misleading because there had been evidence of an inflammatory process for more than a year. The stent-graft with the surrounding aorta was removed and replaced by a conventional tube graft. Systemic chemotherapy followed. The tumor recurred after 12 months, with pulmonary metastases and tumor embolic occlusion of his left femoral artery. Thrombectomy was performed, and a second course of chemotherapy was administered. The patient died 24 months after the conversion procedure.
Conclusion:
Morphological changes of the aneurysm wall seen on computed tomographic scans of EVAR patients may not be incidental or signs of infection; rather, a malignant tumor of the aorta or lymphatic disease, although rare, have to be taken into consideration as well.
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