TOPIC: Lung Cancer TYPE: Medical Student/Resident Case Reports INTRODUCTION: Angiosarcoma is a rare and aggressive tumor that develops from the endothelium of lymphatic or blood vessels and typically originates in the head and neck. It is a disease of older adults and, despite aggressive therapy, has a notoriously poor prognosis. Metastatic disease is common to the liver, breast, bone, and skin with 20% of patients developing solid, cavitary and cystic pulmonary lesions. Secondary spontaneous pneumothorax (SSP) due to malignancy is rare and develops from spontaneous rupture of cystic lung lesions in angiosarcoma. CASE PRESENTATION: The patient is an 87-year-old woman with a past medical history of angiosarcoma of the scalp status-post surgical resection and radiation treatment with new metastases to the carotid lymph nodes and spleen. She presented to the emergency department (ED) in acute hypoxic respiratory failure (AHRF) with an arterial oxygen saturation of 82% despite oxygen supplementation and was hypotensive. Chest x-ray and CT chest both demonstrated large bilateral pneumothoraces. Placement of bilateral chest tube thoracostomy resulted in lung expansion and improvement in oxygen saturation and hemodynamic status. The patient underwent bilateral pleurodesis with doxycycline and removal of chest tubes 3 days later with no further complications and was subsequently discharged home. One month later the patient presented to the ED with AHRF secondary to reoccurrence of bilateral spontaneous pneumothoraces. After chest tube thoracostomy the patient was transferred to inpatient hospice. DISCUSSION: SSP is an uncommon complication of pulmonary metastasis accounting for <1% of all spontaneous pneumothoraces. Simultaneous bilateral SSP is an even rarer occurrence accounting for <1% of all cases of spontaneous pneumothoraces. Other reported causes of bilateral pneumothorax include sarcoidosis, radiation, trauma, iatrogenesis, and cystic lung disease. Based on literature review there have been <20 reports worldwide of bilateral pneumothorax caused by pulmonary metastatic angiosarcoma. Prognosis after pneumothorax is poor with mortality reported within several months. Once the disease has progressed to this point, it is important to involve palliative care and hospice to discuss prognosis and goals of care. CONCLUSIONS: No established systemic treatment exists for angiosarcoma despite sporadic reports of moderately effective chemotherapy. With the high metastatic potential of angiosarcoma and its predilection towards the lungs, along with the rarity of SSP (especially bilaterally), a high degree of suspicion and close monitoring is required when pulmonary lesions are noted on imaging in this group of patients. REFERENCE #1: Upadya A, Amoateng-Adjepong Y, Haddad RG. Recurrent bilateral spontaneous pneumothorax complicating chemotherapy for metastatic sarcoma. South Med J. 2003;96(8):821-823. REFERENCE #2: Jimenez, D., Antaki, J., & Kamangar, N. (2016). Metastatic Pulmonary Angiosarcoma Presenting With Bilateral Secondary Spontaneous Pneumothoraces. Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, 32(4), 292–296. doi:10.1177/0885066616683323. REFERENCE #3: Marie Christine Aubry. Chapter 29 - Pulmonary Involvement by Extrapulmonary Neoplasms. Editor(s): Dani S. Zander, Carol F. Farver. In The Foundations in Diagnostic Pathology Series, Pulmonary Pathology, Churchill Livingstone, 2008. Pages 622-635. ISBN 9780443067419. DISCLOSURES: No relevant relationships by Anas Ahmed, source=Web Response No relevant relationships by Thomas Donnelly, source=Web Response No relevant relationships by Joy Wang, source=Web Response No relevant relationships by Steven Young, source=Web Response No relevant relationships by Nicholas Zingas, source=Web Response