CASE 16128 Published on 14.11.2018

Pleural fibroma as an incidental finding in chest radiography

Section

Chest imaging, Hybrid imaging

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

Paternain A, Malmierca P, Ezponda A, Calvo M, González-Huebra I, García Baizán A, García del Barrio L, Pueyo JC

Clínica Universidad de Navarra, Av. Pio XII 36, Pamplona, Spain; Email:apaternainn@unav.es
Patient

50 years, male

Categories
Area of Interest Lung, Thorax ; Imaging Technique PET-CT, CT
Clinical History

An asymptomatic 50-year-old man that has a chest x-ray performed for a clinical checkup. Blood tests were normal.

Imaging Findings

Chest x-ray image shows a small opacity in the left lung with well-defined medial margin and non-defined lateral margin, that suggests a pleural-based mass (Figure 1). A chest CT was performed afterwards, which demonstrated a small, homogeneous and smooth mass arising from the pleural surface (Figure 2). There was no bone destruction. PET-CT showed low metabolic activity (SUV max = 2,2) (Figure 3). The mass was surgically removed and it was demonstrated to be a pleural fibroma.

Discussion

Pleural fibromas, also known as localized fibrous tumors of the pleura or benign mesothelioma, are rare tumors that arise from the pleura [1]. 80% of them originate in the visceral pleural [2]. Although, most patients are asymptomatic [1], they can develop symptoms like cough or chest pain, especially if the tumor is large. Chest pain is more common in tumors originated in parietal pleura [3]. They are usually benign and slow growing [2].
Pleural fibromas appear on chest radiography as round and peripheral masses with an obtuse angle with the chest wall [1]. When the mass is pedunculated, its size or position can change in when the patient changes its position [1, 2]. On CT scans pleural fibromas present as soft tissue masses with homogeneous contrast enhancement. Areas of necrosis or hemorrhage may be present. They rarely show calcifications, rib destruction or invasion [2]. Utility of FDG PET to determine whether the tumor is benign or not is unclear. It can be useful in order to exclude other malignant tumors of the pleura. It cannot replace histological diagnosis [4].
Intercostal nerves tumors must be included in the differential diagnosis as they have a similar appearance on CT scans. Schwannoma is the most common subtype [5].
Pleural fibromas are associated with an increased prevalence of hypoglycemia and hypertrophic pulmonary osteoartropathy. They do not associate with asbestos exposure [1, 2].
Surgical excision is the treatment of choice. Recurrence is rare [1, 2].
Written informed patient consent for publication has been obtained.

Differential Diagnosis List
Pleural fibroma
Intercostal schwannoma
Loculated pleural effusion
Pleural metastases
Pleural lipoma
Final Diagnosis
Pleural fibroma
Case information
URL: https://eurorad.org/case/16128
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.16128
ISSN: 1563-4086
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