DOI:10.2214/AJR.05.1011
AJR 2007; 189:W221-W223
© American Roentgen Ray Society
Unilateral Usual Interstitial Pneumonia Associated with Sarcoma of the Pulmonary Artery
Semin Chong1,
Tae Sung Kim1,
Man Pyo Chung2,
Eun Yoon Cho3 and
Jhingook Kim4
1 Department of Radiology, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University
School of Medicine, 50, Ilwon-dong, Gangnam-gu, Seoul 135-710, South
Korea.
2 Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine,
Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul,
South Korea.
3 Department of Pathology, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University
School of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea.
4 Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Samsung Medical Center,
Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea.
Received June 13, 2005;
accepted after revision September 4, 2005.
Address correspondence to T. S. Kim.
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Keywords: cardiovascular disease CT embolism ischemia lung disease
Introduction
The histologic pattern of usual interstitial pneumonia is heterogeneous
areas of interstitial inflammation, dense acellular collagen deposition,
fibroblastic foci, and honeycombing
[1]. Various clinical
conditions have been known to be associated with usual interstitial pneumonia,
including idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, collagen vascular disease, drug
toxicity, chronic hypersensitivity pneumonitis, asbestosis, and infection with
agents such as Epstein–Barr virus and HIV-1
[2–4].
To our knowledge, however, an association between usual interstitial pneumonia
and chronic pulmonary ischemia has not been reported in the English
literature. We present a case of unilateral usual interstitial pneumonia
associated with slowly growing pulmonary artery sarcoma and suggest that
chronic pulmonary ischemia may be one of the etiologic factors in usual
interstitial pneumonia.
Case Report
A 52-year-old man with dyspnea was admitted to our institution. The medical
history revealed that he had been admitted to a local hospital 5 years
previously because of the incidental finding of a pulmonary mass on a chest
radiograph obtained for a routine medical examination. Contrast-enhanced chest
CT pursuant to the chest radiograph showed a 5.5 x 2.5 cm intraluminal
filling defect in the right main pulmonary artery, raising the possibility of
pulmonary artery sarcoma (Fig.
1A). No other abnormality was present in the underlying lung
parenchyma (Fig. 1B).
Excisional biopsy of the intravascular mass was recommended, but the patient
declined because he had no specific symptoms and feared major surgery.

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Fig. 1A —52-year-old man with unilateral usual interstitial pneumonia
associated with pulmonary artery sarcoma. Initial contrast-enhanced chest CT
scan obtained with mediastinal window at local hospital shows intraluminal
filling defect (arrows) in right main pulmonary artery.
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Fig. 1B —52-year-old man with unilateral usual interstitial pneumonia
associated with pulmonary artery sarcoma. Initial contrast-enhanced chest CT
scan obtained with lung window at level of inferior pulmonary vein shows no
abnormal findings in underlying lungs.
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Five years after the evaluation at the local hospital, the patient had
gradually increasing dyspnea and was admitted to our institution for further
evaluation. Contrast-enhanced chest CT showed the previously detected
intravascular mass in the right main pulmonary artery had increased in extent,
measuring 8.5 x 3 cm in maximum diameter and extended to the lobar
branches of the pulmonary artery (Fig.
1C). The presence of several tortuous hypertrophied intercostal
arteries newly identified in the right hemithorax and hypertrophy of the right
bronchial artery suggested a systemic arterial supply to the ipsilateral right
lung in association with chronic pulmonary ischemia
(Fig. 1C). On lung window
high-resolution CT scans (1-mm collimation), the ipsilateral right lung
exhibited subpleural areas of ground-glass attenuation and irregular linear
opacities with honeycombing, findings suggestive of usual interstitial
pneumonia (Fig. 1D).

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Fig. 1C —52-year-old man with unilateral usual interstitial pneumonia
associated with pulmonary artery sarcoma. Contrast-enhanced chest CT scan
obtained with mediastinal window at our institution 5 years after A and
B shows intravascular mass (straight arrows) in right
main pulmonary artery has grown and extends to lobar pulmonary arteries. New
appearance of hypertrophied right bronchial artery (curved arrow) and
intercostal arteries (arrowheads) suggests presence of collateral
vessels for systemic arterial supply to chronically ischemic lung.
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Fig. 1D —52-year-old man with unilateral usual interstitial pneumonia
associated with pulmonary artery sarcoma. High-resolution (1-mm collimation)
CT scan obtained with lung window at level of inferior pulmonary vein shows
subpleural areas of ground-glass attenuation and irregular linear opacities
with honeycombing (arrowheads) in right middle and lower lobes.
Findings suggest usual interstitial pneumonia involving only ipsilateral right
lung.
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To confirm the diagnosis and for treatment, open thoracotomy and excisional
biopsy were performed. At surgery, frozen biopsy specimens obtained from the
right main pulmonary artery contained pulmonary artery sarcoma. The patient
underwent curative right pneumonectomy and reconstruction of the main
pulmonary artery with a bovine pericardial patch. Multiple collateral vessels
were identified along the costal pleura. Gross examination revealed a pale
yellowish partly myxoid intravascular mass in the lumen of the right main
pulmonary artery (Fig. 1E). The
tumor exhibited mainly intravascular polypoid growth with focal invasion of
the adjacent lung parenchyma. Histopathologic examination of the intravascular
mass revealed low-grade pulmonary artery sarcoma consisting of atypical
spindle cells in myxoid stroma, moderate cellular pleomorphism, and rare
mitoses. The biopsy specimens obtained from the subpleural lung parenchyma of
the right middle and lower lobes contained areas of microscopic honeycombing
and irregular interstitial fibrosis, findings consistent with usual
interstitial pneumonia (Fig.
1F). The patient recovered uneventfully and had no evidence of
local recurrence or distant metastasis 2 months after surgery.

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Fig. 1E —52-year-old man with unilateral usual interstitial pneumonia
associated with pulmonary artery sarcoma. Photograph of pneumonectomy specimen
shows pale yellowish myxoid intravascular mass in right main pulmonary artery
and extending to lobar pulmonary arteries (arrows). Area of
subpleural fibrosis and honeycombing is evident in right lower lobe
(star).
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Fig. 1F —52-year-old man with unilateral usual interstitial pneumonia
associated with pulmonary artery sarcoma. Photomicrograph of biopsy specimen
obtained from subpleural area of right lower lobe shows areas of microscopic
honeycombing (arrows) and irregular interstitial fibrosis
(star). Findings are consistent with usual interstitial pneumonia. (H
and E, x40)
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Discussion
The systemic arterial supply to the lungs can be congenital or acquired
[5]. Hypertrophy of normal
systemic arteries, which include the bronchial arteries, intercostal arteries,
internal mammary arteries, inferior phrenic arteries, and branches of the
thyrocervical trunk, has been known to develop in patients with
bronchiectasis, pulmonary tuberculosis, chronic pulmonary thromboembolism, or
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
[5]. These systemic arteries
supply the lungs by means of intrapulmonary bronchopulmonary arterial
anastomoses or transpleural systemic–pulmonary artery anastomoses
[5].
In patients with chronic pulmonary thromboembolism, the reduction in
pulmonary arterial pressure due to pulmonary artery occlusion is known to
result in tortuous dilatation of bronchial arteries, which serve as collateral
vessels supplying the ischemic lung
[5]. The
systemic–pulmonary arterial communication also has been found in
association with chronic pulmonary artery occlusion induced by Takayasu's
arteritis [6]. In our case, we
believe that a very slowly growing low-grade pulmonary artery sarcoma had been
causing longstanding pulmonary ischemia due to pulmonary arterial occlusion,
which led to secondary hypertrophic changes in bronchial and intercostal
arteries, making them collateral vessels for systemic arterial supply to the
ischemic lung.
Usual interstitial pneumonia is a relatively nonspecific pattern of chronic
lung injury characterized by fibrosis and honeycomb remodeling
[7]. Although various clinical
conditions, including collagen vascular disease, drug toxicity, chronic
hypersensitivity pneumonitis, asbestosis, and viral infection, have been known
to be associated with usual interstitial pneumonia
[2–4],
the association with chronic pulmonary ischemia has not been not reported, to
our knowledge. In our case, we believe that unilateral usual interstitial
pneumonia might have been derived from 5 years of chronic ischemic lung injury
induced by slowly growing pulmonary artery sarcoma. The presence of a chronic
ischemic lung injury can be supported by compensatory hypertrophic changes in
the ipsilateral bronchial and intercostal arteries, which served as collateral
vessels for the ischemic lung. An alternative explanation for the unilateral
pulmonary fibrosis is the possibility of the presence of a fibrogenetic factor
secreted from the sarcoma, localizing with more concentration in the
ipsilateral lung, and resulting in pulmonary fibrosis. The findings in our
case of unilateral usual interstitial pneumonia associated with slowly growing
pulmonary artery sarcoma suggest that chronic pulmonary ischemia may be an
etiologic factor in usual interstitial pneumonia.
References
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