Primary cardiac angiosarcoma: A case report.
Nóra AmbrusKálmán HavasiAnita KalaposLászló SághyAttila MakaiGábor BogátsZoltán HegedűsBéla IványiZsuzsanna BesenyiZsuzsanna PápaiLászló NagyTamás ForsterAttila NemesPublished in: Echocardiography (Mount Kisco, N.Y.) (2018)
Cardiac angiosarcomas are the most common primary malignant cardiac tumors in adults. The diagnosis is often delayed due to nonspecific clinical symptoms at presentation. The cornerstones of diagnosis are echocardiography and the histological evaluation of the cardiac biopsy. The knowledge on the treatment is limited; the outcomes of chemotherapy, radiotherapy, complete surgical removal, and heart transplantation are controversial. We report a 38-year-old woman with a primary heart tumor which infiltrated the right atrial wall and the pericardium and caused pericardial effusion. Angiosarcoma was verified histologically. The surgical excision could not be radical, and the patient died 3 months from diagnosis.