Abstract
Cutaneous glomeruloid hemangioma is a hallmark of POEMS syndrome. These patients have elevated serum levels of vascular endothelial growth factor. The authors report an extracutaneous uterine glomeruloid hemangioma in an 82-year-old woman with a history of breast and endometrial carcinomas. Within the lumen of myometrial vessels, a lobular, glomeruloid proliferation of capillary-like CD31 and vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1-positive endothelial cells was found. The capillary loops were lined by endothelial cells, most of them containing PAS-positive and immunoglobulin-positive eosinophilic hyaline globules (thanatosomes). This vascular proliferation was consistent with a glomeruloid hemangioma. Although an extracutaneous glomeruloid vascular proliferation has been found in the retroperitoneal adipose tissue in a patient with POEMS syndrome, this study reports what seems to be the first case of visceral glomeruloid hemangioma in a patient without POEMS syndrome. The authors hypothesize that the glomeruloid endothelial cell proliferation with vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1 expression may be a paraneoplastic phenomenon.
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