Abstract

The International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies (ISSVA) devised a multidisciplinary etiopathogenesis based approach to classify benign vascular anomalies into tumors and malformations. This classification scheme has major therapeutic and prognostic implications as treatment modalities differ for both the categories. Inappropriate usage of the term “hemangioma” for etiopathogenetically distinct entities is commonly seen in clinical practice leading to delivery of incorrect treatment to the patients. We aimed to study the histomorphological and immunohistochemical features of benign vascular anomalies for their precise histopathological classification. A total of 48 cases diagnosed over a period of 3.5 years were reviewed and reclassified into vascular tumors and malformations based on ISSVA classification and prototypical histopathological features. Biopsies were reviewed based on 5 histopathological criteria viz. endothelial morphology, mitotic activity, intralesional nerve bundles, intralesional inflammation, and prominent vessel type. A panel of GLUT-1, WT-1, and Ki-67 was performed in each case. Seven cases of infantile hemangioma, 4 cases each of non-involuting congenital hemangioma and pyogenic granuloma, and 33 cases of vascular malformations were diagnosed. Endothelial cell morphology (p < 0.001), mitotic activity (p < 0.001), and intralesional nerve bundles (p < 0.001) were found to be statistically significant in differentiating hemangioma from malformations. GLUT-1 (p < 0.001) and Ki-67 labeling index (p < 0.001) were useful to distinguish infantile hemangioma from vascular malformations. To conclude, the ISSVA classification of benign vascular anomalies can be reliably done on histopathology. However, every case must be interpreted in the light of clinical and radiological features.

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