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Case Report

Cardiac Metastasis from Myxoid Liposarcoma Managed Successfully with Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy: Case Report and Review of the Literature

by
Georgios M. Stergiopoulos
1,
Brittany L. Siontis
2,
Ivy A. Petersen
3,
Matthew T. Houdek
4,
Thanh P. Ho
2,
Scott H. Okuno
2 and
Steven I. Robinson
1,2,*
1
Department of Molecular Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA
2
Department of Medical Oncology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA
3
Department of Radiation Oncology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA
4
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Curr. Oncol. 2024, 31(9), 5384-5398; https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31090398
Submission received: 13 June 2024 / Revised: 30 August 2024 / Accepted: 10 September 2024 / Published: 12 September 2024

Abstract

:
Background: Liposarcoma, one of the most prevalent sarcoma histologies, is recognized for its tendency for extra-pulmonary metastases. While oligometastatic cardiac disease is rarely reported, it poses a unique challenge as oligometastatic sarcomas are often managed with surgical resection. Case Report: We present a case of a 62-year-old man diagnosed with an oligometastatic myxoid liposarcoma (MLPS) to the heart 19 years after the primary tumor resection from the lower limb. The metastatic mass, situated in the pericardium adjacent and infiltrating the left ventricle, was not managed surgically but with a combination of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The patient’s disease remains stable to date, for more than 10 years. Literature Review: We conducted a review of the literature to determine the preferred management approach for solitary cardiac metastases of sarcomas. We also conducted an in-depth analysis focusing on reported cases of MLPS metastasizing to the heart, aiming to extract pertinent data regarding the patient characteristics and the corresponding management strategies. Conclusions: Although clinical diagnoses of solitary or oligometastatic cardiac metastases from sarcomas are infrequent, this case underscores the significance of aggressive management employing chemotherapy and radiotherapy for chemosensitive and radiosensitive sarcomas, especially when surgical removal is high-risk. Furthermore, it challenges the notion that surgery is the exclusive therapeutic option leading to long-term clinical benefit in patients with recurrent sarcomas.

1. Background

Soft tissue sarcomas are a heterogeneous group of malignancies featuring approximately 100 distinct histological subtypes [1]. Liposarcoma is the most common soft tissue sarcoma, making up to 17–25% of all soft tissue sarcomas [2,3]. Malignant adipocyte tumors can be differentiated according to the most recent World Health Organization (WHO) classification in well-differentiated liposarcoma (lipoma-like, sclerosing, inflammatory), dedifferentiated liposarcoma, myxoid liposarcoma (MLPS), pleomorphic liposarcoma, and myxoid pleomorphic liposarcoma [4]. Myxoid (and round cell) is the second most common type of liposarcoma, comprising about 35% of all liposarcoma cases. The median age at diagnosis is 45 years old, and the most common primary locations are in the lower extremities and buttocks [5].
The cytogenetics of MLPS have been well characterized. Specifically, this tumor is driven by the translocation of DDIT3 (DNA damage-inducible transcript 3, also known as C/EBP-homologous protein/CHOP). Most cases (~90%) are driven by the (12;16) (q13;p11) chromosomal translocation that results in the DDIT3-FUS (fused in sarcoma, also known as translocated in sarcoma [TLS]) gene fusion. The remaining cases present with a (12;22) (q13;q12) that leads to a DDIT3-EWSR1 (Ewing sarcoma breakpoint region 1) gene fusion, with EWSR1 being closely related to FUS [6,7].
MLPS is metastatic in 14–33% of the cases [8,9,10,11], but unlike other sarcomas, it has a great propensity for extra-pulmonary metastases [8,9,10,11]. Common sites of metastasis include soft tissue and bones, lungs, abdominal solid organs (e.g., liver, or less frequently, pancreas and kidneys), and lymph nodes [8,9,10,11]. Cardiac metastases are extremely rare with only 46 cases being reported worldwide [12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55] (Table 1).
In general, sarcoma metastasis to the heart is considered to be a rare phenomenon as most of them remain asymptomatic and go unrecognized; nonetheless, their incidence in post-mortem analysis might be up to 25% [56]. Once diagnosed, cardiac metastases warrant urgent treatment, given the high mortality rate [57,58]. However, complete surgical resection poses significant risks due to the difficult anatomic location, resulting in high perioperative mortality rates and uncertain benefits for patients [59]. Individual tumor characteristics, location of the metastasis, risk of imminent death (e.g., secondary to arrhythmia, tamponade, thromboembolic events, heart failure), risk of perioperative mortality, and patients’ wishes should guide the therapeutic decision-making process.
In this paper, we present the case of a patient with solitary cardiac metastasis 19 years after the initial diagnosis and management of an MLPS of the thigh, who has been in long-term remission (>10 years) following aggressive chemotherapy and radiotherapy to the cardiac oligometastatic deposit, without any surgical intervention. To our knowledge, this patient, apart from being the longest survivor following cardiac metastasis of MLPS, is the only reported case with an oligometastatic cardiac liposarcoma metastasis managed without surgery (other than two cases where the patients died soon after the diagnosis and before the therapeutic plan was initiated [16,18]) (In the case described by Motevalli et al., the patient was initially diagnosed with a mediastinal metastasis via sonography. The metastasis was confirmed to be cardiac in the post-mortem autopsy).

2. Case Report

We report the case of a 62-year-old man with MLPS of the lower limb with a late oligometastatic tumor to the heart. The metastasis was managed with chemotherapy and radiotherapy, resulting in stable disease to this day, with more than 10 years of follow-up.
This patient was diagnosed at the age of 43 with primary MLPS confined to the vastus lateralis muscle of the thigh. Tumor resection was followed by adjuvant radiotherapy, and he remained disease-free for 19 years. Post-treatment, the patient had left lower extremity lymphedema and neuropathy but no local relapse.
At the age of 62 years, while evaluating his lymphedema symptoms, abdominal and pelvic computed tomography scans (CT) revealed a pericardial mass. The patient did not experience any symptoms attributed to the cardiac mass at the time of diagnosis. Subsequent chest CT (Figure 1a) and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a solitary 5.2 × 4.7 × 3.5 cm mass involving the pericardium and infiltrating the lateral wall of the left ventricle. Cardiac MRI was selected to complement the CT findings due to its superiority in characterizing soft tissue and its high specificity in distinguishing between benign pseudomasses and malignant cardiac tumors [60,61]. Additionally, MRI becomes particularly relevant when recurrent soft-tissue sarcoma is suspected due to its high diagnostic accuracy [62].
Metastatic MLPS was confirmed following a video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS). At the VATS procedure, it was noted that the tumor was not attached to the pericardium at the site of biopsy. The treatment plan included neo-adjuvant chemo- and radiotherapy prior to determining the feasibility of surgical resection, as the original tumor extent was not felt to be amenable to local excision. The patient received four cycles of doxorubicin (30 mg/m2) and ifosfamide (3750 mg/m2) on days 1 and 2 (every 21–28 days) with mesna (750 mg/m2) and growth factor support. This resulted in a modest (~20%) decrease in maximal tumor dimension. He subsequently received 50 Gray (Gy) in 25 fractions, using an intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) technique, sparing the heart and lungs of high doses (Figure 2). This was delivered with two concomitant cycles of radiosensitizing chemotherapy with mitomycin (6 mg/m2) and cisplatin (45 mg/m2) on day 1 (every 28 days), leading to a decrease in tumor size from 5 × 3.7 cm to 4 × 2.5 cm. Doxorubicin was omitted from the radiosensitizing regimen to minimize the expected cardiotoxicity related to chest irradiation, and the patient was closely monitored but did not display any signs of declining cardiac function. In anticipation of surgery, additional chemotherapy with gemcitabine (900 mg/m2) on day 1 and gemcitabine (900 mg/m2) with docetaxel (75 mg/m2) on day 8 (every 21 days) was initiated. Cycle 3 was dose-reduced by 25%, and the patient received steroids for presumed chemotherapy-induced pneumonitis. Following cycle 3, he developed worsening pulmonary toxicity with a differential diagnosis, including infection and worsening inflammation; thus, chemotherapy was discontinued.
CT scan 8 weeks after chemotherapy discontinuation showed a slight increase in tumor size, but subsequent imaging 6 weeks later revealed tumor stability. Surgical resection was deemed high-risk, and as the patient had stable disease with a low likelihood of available chemotherapeutic modalities further reducing the size of the mass, observation was recommended. Surveillance included CT chest, abdomen, and pelvis every 2–3 months for 1.5 years, every 6 months until 5 years, then annually. The patient’s disease has remained stable to date for >10 years since the completion of therapy (Figure 1b). Notably, previous treatment was well-tolerated in terms of cardiac toxicity, with the patient showing no signs or symptoms of declining cardiac function, and a cardiac MRI performed five years post-treatment revealed only mild hypokinesis of the basal lateral left ventricular wall, with a preserved left ventricular ejection fraction of 57%.

3. Discussion

Cardiac metastasis from sarcoma is rare; thus, there is no consensus on a treatment approach.
In our initial literature review, we aimed to assess whether surgical resection is indeed the preferred method for managing solitary cardiac metastases of sarcomas. Employing the terms “Sarcoma(s)” and “Cardiac metastasis/es” on PubMed, we identified 161 published cases (in case reports and case series) of sarcomas metastasizing to the heart. After excluding the cases where the metastases were diagnosed post-mortem (n = 6) or at the time of the primary diagnosis (n = 36), we analyzed the remaining cases (n = 119). Among these, approximately one-third of the patients had isolated cardiac metastases (n = 41). Since surgical resection of cardiac metastasis seems to be the anecdotal recommendation in the field [12,63], only a minority of the reviewed cases (n = 13, 32.5%) did not undergo surgery. In most of these reports, (n = 11, 84.6%) surgical resection was not pursued due to the patient’s status, the patient’s preference, or the inoperable nature of the lesion. Thus, no conclusions can be drawn regarding the efficacy of medical versus surgical management in this patient group.
Cardiac metastases may pose an imminent risk of death, and in such cases, urgent surgical intervention may be warranted [38,48,59,64]. However, in all other instances, surgical resection should not be presented as the exclusive therapeutic modality as it often fails to provide benefit to the patients [59]. Specifically, cases have been described when surgery was attempted, but complete resection was not possible [34,41]. Additionally, even when negative surgical margins had been achieved, local recurrences occurred [20,21,44,65,66,67], in some cases as soon as prior to the initiation of the adjuvant therapy [66]. Ultimately, intracardiac procedures are complex and carry a high risk of intra- or perioperative mortality [35,38,68,69]. Particularly for MLPS, despite the anatomic challenges, surgical resection was attempted in approximately two-thirds of reported cardiac metastases (Table 1). For those who did not undergo surgery, the most common reasons were patient death soon after diagnosis or heavy metastatic burden.
Notably, our literature review revealed cases of patients with cardiac sarcoma metastases treated with radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and/or immunotherapy, achieving stable disease, or even having partial and complete responses without surgical intervention [37,54,70,71,72]. One of these patients had complete radiological resolution on MRI of the cardiac recurrence of a malignant fibrous histiocytoma following treatment with high-dose chemotherapy followed by peripheral blood progenitor cell transplant and immunotherapy with interleukin-2 and 13-cis-retinoic acid [72]. Supporting these data, a single-institution retrospective study in Japan, where none of the patients with sarcoma had resection of cardiac metastasis, suggested that radiotherapy might provide an alternative local treatment option as the median survival of patients receiving radiotherapy was 10.5 months compared to 3.5 months for those who did not [73]. Additionally, the authors claimed that a total dose of more than 45 Gy should be given to achieve the best clinical response [73].
Particularly for MLPS, which is among the most chemosensitive [74] and radiosensitive [75] sarcomas, only two cases have been described in which metastatic cardiac MLPS has been treated with radiotherapy, and both responded to treatment [37,54]. In one of them, the patient had multifocal disease and was initially treated with six cycles of doxorubicin (60–75 mg/m2). Even though the patient had stable disease, he received adjuvant radiotherapy (35Gy) in 15 fractions to the cardiac lesion due to concerns for arrhythmias with a higher dose. The cardiac lesion remained stable, but new metastatic lesions appeared in the meantime [37]. The other patient, who had multifocal disease and symptoms of heart failure attributed to his cardiac metastasis, had complete resolution of the heart failure symptoms following radiotherapy with 40 Gy [54] over 30 days. Additionally, two cases have been reported in which cardiac MLPS metastases were treated solely with chemotherapy (etoposide or cyclophosphamide, dacarbazine, vincristine, adriamycin) [40,45]. Neither patient responded to treatment, but both had extensive disease at the time of diagnosis, and one of them received single-agent etoposide, which is inferior to standard anthracycline-based chemotherapy [76].
To the best of our knowledge, no other case of solitary cardiac MLPS has been managed primarily with radiotherapy and chemotherapy. The encouraging outcome of our patient, who is by far the longest-reported survivor without disease progression following cardiac metastasis of liposarcoma, is supported by a case described by Pino et al., who reported a patient with a right atrial metastasis of an MLPS which recurred in the atrium one year after surgical management [21]. The recurrence was managed with radiotherapy, leading to complete regression followed by chemotherapy (radiation dose and chemotherapy agents not reported), and at the 6-month follow-up, the patient remained asymptomatic [21].

4. Conclusions

To conclude, the decade-long disease stability observed in our patient without surgical intervention remains particularly noteworthy even when accounting for certain positive prognostic factors of this patient. These prognostic factors included a prolonged disease-free interval, a solitary metastasis for which the patient was asymptomatic, and the chemosensitive and radiosensitive tumor type.
Moreover, this case report highlights the importance of multidisciplinary care and underscores that definitive management of oligometastatic sarcoma metastasis, especially when surgical removal is high-risk (e.g., in the heart, brain, or liver hilum), can include chemotherapy and radiotherapy.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, S.I.R.; literature review and writing—original draft preparation, G.M.S.; writing—review and editing, G.M.S., B.L.S., I.A.P., M.T.H., T.P.H., S.H.O. and S.I.R.; Figure 1 was generated by S.I.R. and Figure 2 was generated by I.A.P. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

The study was conducted according to the guidelines of the Declaration of Helsinki and approved by the Institutional Review Board of Mayo Clinic (protocol code 12-001661; approved on 10 April 2014).

Informed Consent Statement

The patient provided authorization to utilize their medical record for research. We confirmed there was no change to this status in the Minnesota Research Authorization Database prior to publication.

Data Availability Statement

Further information can be provided upon request to the corresponding author of the manuscript.

Acknowledgments

We would like to acknowledge the use of Biorender for the labeling of Figure 1 and Figure 2.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no relevant conflicts of interest.

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Figure 1. Chest computerized tomography (CT) scans at diagnosis of the cardiac metastasis and 10 years post-treatment. (a). CT scan before the initiation of chemotherapy and radiotherapy demonstrating a heterogeneous mass located in the pericardium and extending into the left ventricle. (b). The latest CT scan 10.5 years after diagnosis demonstrating a residual soft tissue mass centered in the left posterolateral pericardium, which has remained stable since the completion of therapy.
Figure 1. Chest computerized tomography (CT) scans at diagnosis of the cardiac metastasis and 10 years post-treatment. (a). CT scan before the initiation of chemotherapy and radiotherapy demonstrating a heterogeneous mass located in the pericardium and extending into the left ventricle. (b). The latest CT scan 10.5 years after diagnosis demonstrating a residual soft tissue mass centered in the left posterolateral pericardium, which has remained stable since the completion of therapy.
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Figure 2. Color wash images to visually represent the distribution of the radiation. (a). Color wash image of 20 gray (Gy) volume displaying sparing of the lung and anterior heart. The volume of the total lung receiving at least 20 Gy (total lung V20Gy) was equal to 10.6% (left lung V20Gy = 23.4% and right lung V20Gy = 0%). The heart mean dose was equal to 20 Gy with only 75 cubic centimeters (cc) of the treatment volume overlapping with the heart and 150 cc of the heart getting ≥30 Gy. (b). Color wash image of 50 Gy volume displaying sparing of the apex of the left ventricle from the prescription dose.
Figure 2. Color wash images to visually represent the distribution of the radiation. (a). Color wash image of 20 gray (Gy) volume displaying sparing of the lung and anterior heart. The volume of the total lung receiving at least 20 Gy (total lung V20Gy) was equal to 10.6% (left lung V20Gy = 23.4% and right lung V20Gy = 0%). The heart mean dose was equal to 20 Gy with only 75 cubic centimeters (cc) of the treatment volume overlapping with the heart and 150 cc of the heart getting ≥30 Gy. (b). Color wash image of 50 Gy volume displaying sparing of the apex of the left ventricle from the prescription dose.
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Table 1. Published cases of myxoid liposarcoma metastatic to the heart.
Table 1. Published cases of myxoid liposarcoma metastatic to the heart.
Year
Published
AuthorsHistology (Location) of the Primary TumorCardiac Metastasis Diagnosis Age in YearsLocation(s) of Cardiac MetastasisTime to Cardiac MetastasisSolitary Cardiac Metastasis/Additional Metastatic SitesCardiac Surgery (Provided Rationale When Surgery Was Not Performed)Outcome Following the Diagnosis of Cardiac MetastasisRef.
2024Stergiopoulos et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)62LV, pericardium19 yearsSolitary cardiacNo (high-risk surgical procedure)Patient still alive with stable disease at 11-year follow-upPresent publication
2020Ikuta et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)40LV2 yearsSolitary cardiacYesConfirmed death 2 years later[12]
2020Bezak et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (gluteal region)52IVS3 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient still alive at 3-week follow-up[13]
2019Porres-Aguilar et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)63RVAt initial diagnosisThigh (primary site)No (poor surgical candidacy)Confirmed death 4 days later[14]
2018Passhak et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (ankle)49LV9 yearsAbdomenYesPatient still alive under chemotherapy at 3-year follow-up[15]
2017Motevalli et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (lower limb)46LV, pericardium16 yearsSolitary cardiacNo (expired soon after admission)Confirmed death a few hours later[16]
2016Dendramis et al.Dedifferentiated liposarcoma (pleura)44LVAt initial diagnosisMultiple metastasesNo (poor prognosis)Confirmed death 3 months later[17]
2015Farmer et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (lower limb)61LV17 yearsSolitary cardiacNo (tumor deemed as nonresectable)Confirmed death soon after diagnosis[18]
2014Xu et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)60RV, PA20 yearsSolitary cardiacYes-[19]
2014Vajtai et al.Dedifferentiated liposarcoma (suprarenal retroperitoneal)57RA, IVC4 monthsIVCNo (expired soon after diagnosis)Confirmed death 2 months later[20]
2013Pino et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (shoulder)36LUPV, LA, LV2 yearsSolitary cardiacYesConfirmed death 2 months later[21]
2013Pino et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (lung)35RA3 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient still alive at 1.5-year follow-up[21]
2013Pino et al.Round cell liposarcoma (popliteal fossa)23Pericardium3 yearsSolitary cardiacYesConfirmed death 1.5 months later[21]
2013Mottahedi et al.Round cell liposarcoma (knee) (HG)50RA, RV, SVC4 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient still alive at 1-year follow-up[22]
2012Agaimy et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)65RA, IVC3 yearsSolitary cardiacYesConfirmed death 2 months later[23]
2012Fernandez-Golfin et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (lower limb)68Pericardium-Solitary cardiacYes-[24]
2012Markovic et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)45Pericardium5 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient still alive at 6-month follow-up[25]
2011Mitomi et al.Dedifferentiated liposarcoma (retroperitoneal)71LV, pericardium1 yearLungsNo (expired soon after diagnosis)Confirmed death 2 days later[26]
2011Dogan et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)54LA, LUPV4 yearsSolitary cardiacYesConfirmed death 10 months later[27]
2011Lazopoulos et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)63LV, pericardium13 yearsAbdomenYesPatient disease-free at 6-month follow-up[28]
2011Ribeiro et al.Myxoid liposarcoma70LVAt initial diagnosisAbdomen, lungs, pleuraNo (extensive disease)Palliative care only[29]
2009Komoda et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)52RA, RV, epicardium, AV sulcus17 yearsRetroperitoneumYesPatient still alive at 30-month follow-up[30]
2007Chughtai et al.Pleomorphic liposarcoma (shoulder)46RV3 yearsLungsYes-[31]
2005Fairman et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh) (LG)56LV12 yearsSolitary cardiacYes-[32]
2005Kono et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (lower limb)60RA, RV, SVC13 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient still alive at 10-month follow-up[33]
2005Aoyama et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)63Pericardium1 yearPleuraYesConfirmed death soon after the operation[34]
2002Lee et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)53Extensive cardiac5 yearsSolitary cardiacYesConfirmed death during the operation[35]
2002Wong et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (chest)54RV7 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient had stable disease at 6-month follow-up[36]
2001Ng et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)45Interventricular septum, paracardiac region3 yearsThighs, mediastinum, iliac nodes, adrenal, azygo-oesophageal spaceNo (extensive disease)Non-cardiac disease progression 11-month follow-up[37]
2000Sugiyama et al.Myxoid liposarcoma61RV11 yearsSolitary cardiacYesConfirmed death 6 days after the operation[38]
2000Gacem et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (groin)57Pericardium13 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient still alive at 36-month follow-up[39]
1997Hatton et al.Myxoid liposarcoma42Pericardium3 yearsAbdomen, pelvis, lungsNo (extensive disease)Confirmed death 1 year later[40]
1997Wilhelmi et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (LG)53Pericardium9 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient still alive at 7-month follow-up[41]
1994Papa et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)45LV15 yearsAbdomenNo (tumor deemed as nonresectable)Patient still alive at 6-month follow-up[42]
1993Oshima et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)37LV5 years---[43]
1992Langlard et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)54RV5 yearsSolitary cardiacYesConfirmed death 2 years later[44]
1991Maloisel et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (lower limb)28RA4 yearsLungsNoConfirmed death 3 months later[45]
1990Schrem et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (knee)41RA5 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient still alive and in good condition at 1-year follow-up[46]
1988Ozoux et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)60LV17 yearsRetroperitoneumYesConfirmed death 6 months later[47]
1988Bartels et al.Liposarcoma64RV, PA17 yearsSolitary cardiac (at diagnosis)YesConfirmed death 14 hours after the operation[48]
1986Lagrange et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)39RV6 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient disease-free at 10-month follow-up[49]
1985Pizzarello et al.Liposarcoma61RA, RV, pericardium20 yearsPleuraNo (Death soon post-admission)Confirmed death 6 days later[50]
1983Ravikumar et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)76Pericardium, anterior wall25 yearsSolitary cardiacYesPatient disease-free at 1-year follow-up[51]
1981Godwin et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)59RV, Pericardium25 yearsSolitary cardiacYes-[52]
1981Mavroudis et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)59RV, Pericardium25 yearsChest, diaphragm, retroperitoneumYesPatient disease-free at 7-month follow-up[53]
1968Tong et al.Myxoid liposarcoma (thigh)35LV7 yearsGroinNoPatient still alive at 30 months follow-up[54]
1939Scott et al.Liposarcoma-Heart, pericardium----[55]
Table 1: Published cases of myxoid liposarcoma metastatic to the heart. We identified 46, other than ours, reported cases of liposarcoma metastatic to the heart. In 36 of the cases (77%), the metastases originated from soft tissue sarcomas, in 4 (9%) from visceral, and in 7 of them (15%), the location of the primary tumor was not specified. Out of the soft tissue sarcomas, 34 (94%) of the 36 originated from the lower limbs. Regarding the histopathology, 40 (85%) of them were classified as myxoid (or round cell) liposarcomas, 3 (6%) as dedifferentiated, 1 (2%) as pleomorphic, and 3 (6%) remained unspecified by the authors. Tumor grade information, when provided, is noted in the table as either low grade (LG) or high grade (HG). The average age of diagnosis of cardiac metastasis was 52.5 years, and on average occurred 8.5 years following the diagnosis of the primary tumor. Twenty-seven of the metastases (57%) involved only one cardiac location, while 20 of them (43%) involved more than one location. The pericardium was the location most commonly involved (16 cases) (34%), followed by the left ventricle (LV) (15 cases) (32%), the right ventricle (RV) (14 cases) (30%), and the right atrium (RA) (9 cases) (19%). Surprisingly, the left atrium (LA) was involved only in 1 of the 47 reported cases (2%). Out of the 45 cases describing the metastatic burden of the patients at the time of diagnosis, 18 (40%) of them had at least one additional extracardiac metastatic locus, while 27 (60%) of them had solitary cardiac metastasis. Surgery was the preferred method of management in 30 (67%) of the 45 cases discussing management. Twenty-four of them (80%) happened in patients with solitary cardiac lesions, and the balance in patients with multifocal metastatic disease. Particularly, other than our patient, the other two patients with solitary cardiac lesions who did not receive cardiac surgery expired before a therapeutic plan was implemented. Out of the 38 cases detailing the patient’s outcome, 19 (50%) reported patient deaths before the manuscript’s publication, predominantly within the initial year post-diagnosis of the cardiac metastasis. The remaining 50% indicated that patients were alive at the time of article publication, with the longest reported survival time, aside from our patient’s, being 3 years.
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Stergiopoulos, G.M.; Siontis, B.L.; Petersen, I.A.; Houdek, M.T.; Ho, T.P.; Okuno, S.H.; Robinson, S.I. Cardiac Metastasis from Myxoid Liposarcoma Managed Successfully with Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy: Case Report and Review of the Literature. Curr. Oncol. 2024, 31, 5384-5398. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31090398

AMA Style

Stergiopoulos GM, Siontis BL, Petersen IA, Houdek MT, Ho TP, Okuno SH, Robinson SI. Cardiac Metastasis from Myxoid Liposarcoma Managed Successfully with Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy: Case Report and Review of the Literature. Current Oncology. 2024; 31(9):5384-5398. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31090398

Chicago/Turabian Style

Stergiopoulos, Georgios M., Brittany L. Siontis, Ivy A. Petersen, Matthew T. Houdek, Thanh P. Ho, Scott H. Okuno, and Steven I. Robinson. 2024. "Cardiac Metastasis from Myxoid Liposarcoma Managed Successfully with Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy: Case Report and Review of the Literature" Current Oncology 31, no. 9: 5384-5398. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31090398

APA Style

Stergiopoulos, G. M., Siontis, B. L., Petersen, I. A., Houdek, M. T., Ho, T. P., Okuno, S. H., & Robinson, S. I. (2024). Cardiac Metastasis from Myxoid Liposarcoma Managed Successfully with Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy: Case Report and Review of the Literature. Current Oncology, 31(9), 5384-5398. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol31090398

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