Sclerosing Angiomatoid Nodular Transformation (SANT): Report of 25 Cases of a Distinctive Benign Splenic Lesion

Twenty-five cases of a morphologically distinctive vascular lesion of the spleen are described. The patients were 17 women and 8 men, ranging in age from 22 to 74 years (mean, 48.4 years; median, 56 years). The most common presentations were incidental finding of an asymptomatic splenic mass (13 patients), abdominal pain or discomfort (6 patients), and splenomegaly (4 patients). None of the patients had evidence of recurrent disease after splenectomy. The splenic lesion was solitary, measuring 3 to 17 cm, and sharply demarcated from the surrounding parenchyma. The cut surface revealed a mass of coalescing red–brown nodules embedded in a dense fibrous stroma. All cases showed a remarkably consistent multinodular appearance at low-power examination. The individual nodules had an angiomatoid appearance, in the sense that they were composed of slit-like, round or irregular-shaped vascular spaces lined by plump endothelial cells and interspersed by a population of spindly or ovoid cells. Some of the nodules (particularly the smaller ones) were surrounded by concentric rings of collagen fibers. Numerous red blood cells were present, as well as scattered inflammatory cells. Nuclear atypia was minimal, mitotic figures were extremely rare, and necrosis was consistently absent. The internodular stroma consisted of variably myxoid to dense fibrous tissue with scattered plump myofibroblasts, plasma cells, lymphocytes, and siderophages. Immunostaining revealed 3 distinct types of vessels in the angiomatoid nodules: CD34+/CD8−/CD31+ capillaries, CD34−/CD8+/CD31+ sinusoids, and CD34−/CD8−/CD31+ small veins, recapitulating the composition of the normal splenic red pulp. These features are therefore different from those of littoral cell angioma, conventional hemangioma, and hemangioendothelioma of the spleen. We interpret these angiomatoid nodules as altered red pulp tissue that had been entrapped by a nonneoplastic stromal proliferative process. The characteristic morphologic appearance, immunophenotype, and benign clinical course suggest that this is a distinctive nonneoplastic vascular lesion of the spleen that we propose to designate as sclerosing angiomatoid nodular transformation (SANT).

[1]  R. Hoda,et al.  Rosai and Ackerman???s Surgical Pathology , 2004 .

[2]  S. Nurick,et al.  Brain metastases from haemangioendothelioma of the spleen report of a case , 2004, Acta Neuropathologica.

[3]  J. Kutok,et al.  Splenic vascular tumors. , 2003, Seminars in diagnostic pathology.

[4]  G. Frizzera,et al.  Two splenic lesions in need of clarification: hamartoma and inflammatory pseudotumor. , 2003, Seminars in diagnostic pathology.

[5]  M. Türkmen,et al.  Inflammatory pseudotumor of the spleen , 2001, Virchows Archiv.

[6]  Kraus,et al.  Benign vascular neoplasms of the spleen with myoid and angioendotheliomatous features , 1999, Histopathology.

[7]  M. J. Pérez del Río,et al.  [Inflammatory pseudotumor of the spleen. An old concept with many questions]. , 1998, Sangre.

[8]  D. Arber,et al.  Splenic vascular tumors: a histologic, immunophenotypic, and virologic study. , 1997, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[9]  B. Czerniak,et al.  Nodular Spindle‐Cell Vascular Transformation of Lymph Nodes: A Benign Process Occurring Predominantly in Retroperitoneal Lymph Nodes Draining Carcinomas That Can Simulate Kaposi's Sarcoma or Metastatic Tumor , 1995, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[10]  Neiman Rs,et al.  Functional hyposplenism due to a primary epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of the spleen. , 1995 .

[11]  P. Breitfeld,et al.  Functional hyposplenism due to a primary epithelioid hemangioendothelioma of the spleen. , 1995, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.

[12]  S. Sternberg,et al.  Diagnostic surgical pathology , 1994 .

[13]  M. Michal,et al.  Nodular transformation of splenic red pulp due to carcinomatous infiltration. A diagnostic pitfall , 1994, Histopathology.

[14]  A. Esparza,et al.  Hemangioendothelioma of the spleen. , 1992, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.

[15]  S. Suster Epithelioid and spindle-cell hemangioendothelioma of the spleen. Report of a distinctive splenic vascular neoplasm of childhood. , 1992, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[16]  N. Harris,et al.  Splenic hamartoma and capillary hemangioma are distinct entities: immunohistochemical analysis of CD8 expression by endothelial cells. , 1991, Human pathology.

[17]  G. Frizzera,et al.  Littoral Cell Angioma: A Novel Splenic Vascular Lesion Demonstrating Histiocytic Differentiation , 1991 .

[18]  Y. Tsutsumi,et al.  SPLENIC HAMARTOMA , 1986, Acta pathologica japonica.

[19]  H. Stutte,et al.  Hamartomas of the spleen: a study of 20 biopsy cases , 1989, Histopathology.

[20]  M. Joly,et al.  Splenic hamartoma, vascular type, with endothelial proliferation. , 1983, Pathology, research and practice.

[21]  H. Rappaport,et al.  Tumors of the hematopoietic system , 1966 .

[22]  S. Bhatia The Spleen , 1929, The Indian medical gazette.