Benign tumourAdipocyticICD-10 D17.x

Angiolipoma

Painful subcutaneous lipoma ยท angiolipoma

Angiolipomas are benign adipocytic tumours containing mature adipocytes intermixed with a prominent vascular network. They are common, particularly in young men, presenting as multiple tender subcutaneous nodules on the trunk and limbs. Their distinctive feature โ€” pain on palpation โ€” distinguishes them from ordinary lipomas. Familial angiolipomatosis is a recognised autosomal-dominant phenotype. Management is conservative or excisional based on symptoms.

CurrentLast reviewed 16 May 2026

Epidemiology

  • Adults 20-50 years; male predominance (~3:1).
  • Multiple in ~70%; solitary in 30%.
  • Familial angiolipomatosis: autosomal-dominant; numerous angiolipomas; family clustering.
  • Sites: forearms (commonest), trunk, upper arms, thighs.

Pathology

  • Encapsulated subcutaneous lesion.
  • Mixture of mature adipocytes and small thin-walled blood vessels with fibrin thrombi (pathognomonic histological clue).
  • Vascular proportion variable (5-100%):
    • Predominant fat with scattered vessels โ†’ typical angiolipoma.
    • Predominant vessels with sparse fat โ†’ cellular angiolipoma (more concerning histologically but still benign).
  • No atypia, no mitoses, no necrosis.
  • IHC: CD34+ vessels, S100+ adipocytes; benign Ki-67.
  • Molecular: distinct from spindle cell lipoma (no 13q14 deletion).

Clinical features

  • Multiple small (0.5-2 cm) soft mobile subcutaneous nodules.
  • Painful on palpation โ€” the hallmark distinguishing from ordinary lipoma.
  • Pain may radiate; can be spontaneous in some lesions.
  • Slow growth.
  • Overlying skin normal.
  • Sites: forearms, upper arms, anterior trunk.
  • Family history common in familial angiolipomatosis.

Differentials

  • Ordinary lipoma โ€” typically painless.
  • Spindle cell / pleomorphic lipoma โ€” posterior neck / shoulder; older male.
  • Glomus tumour / glomangioma โ€” paroxysmal pain, cold sensitivity, point tenderness.
  • Leiomyoma โ€” painful clustered nodules (Reed syndrome / HLRCC).
  • Schwannoma / neurofibroma โ€” pain on tinel sign; nerve distribution.
  • Eccrine spiradenoma / eccrine angiomatous hamartoma โ€” painful eccrine origin.
  • Dercum disease (adiposis dolorosa) โ€” painful fatty masses, obese postmenopausal women.
  • Granular cell tumour.

Mnemonic for painful subcutaneous tumours: BANGLE โ€” Blue rubber bleb naevus, Angiolipoma, Neuroma, Glomus, Leiomyoma, Eccrine spiradenoma. (Or LEND AN EGG.)

Management

  • Clinical diagnosis usually adequate with classic painful subcutaneous nodules in a young male.
  • Conservative: reassurance; analgesia if needed (NSAIDs).
  • Excision: simple excision for symptomatic / cosmetically prominent lesions; usually well-circumscribed, easy dissection.
  • Recurrence rare.
  • Cellular angiolipoma: complete excision; pathology to confirm benign nature.
  • Familial angiolipomatosis: counsel about benign nature; surgical removal of symptomatic lesions only.
  • No metastatic potential.

References

  1. Howard WR, Helwig EB. Angiolipoma. Arch Dermatol. 1960;82:924-931.
  2. Lin JJ, Lin F. Two entities in angiolipoma: a study of 459 cases. Cancer. 1974;34:720-727.
  3. Sciot R et al. Cytogenetic analysis of subcutaneous angiolipoma: further evidence supporting its difference from ordinary pure lipomas. Am J Surg Pathol. 1997;21:441-444.
  4. WHO Classification of Tumours Editorial Board. WHO Classification of Soft Tissue and Bone Tumours, 5th ed. Lyon: IARC; 2020.

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