MRI findings of a hepatic epithelioid hemangioendothelioma
A 24-year-old female initially presented with right upper quadrant pain for two weeks and was found to have multiple solid lesions in the liver by ultrasound. She was referred to our institution. Laboratory tests and physical examinations were unremarkable.
Abdominal MRI was performed at our institution. Multiple heterogeneous lesions were found in the liver. Most of the lesions were peripherally located. The lesions showed low signal intensity on T1-weighted images (Figure 1A) and high signal intensity on T2-weighted images with a more hyperintense central area (Figure 1B). On dynamic contrast-enhanced images, slight enhancement in the periphery of the lesions was seen with gradual enhancement in delayed phases, which presented as “halo” sign (Figure 1C,D,E,F). Retraction of the liver capsule was caused by some lesions (Figure 1G). Furthermore, some nodules were coalescent (Figure 1H).
The patient underwent laparoscopic partial hepatectomy. Microscopic examination of the lesions showed proliferated fibrous tissue intermingled with epithelioid cells. The tumor cells had characteristic intracellular vascular lumina and stained positive for factor VIII, CD31, and CD34 (Figure 1I, J). The pathologic diagnosis of hepatic EHE was made.
Acknowledgements
Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest.