Vascular ยท Locally aggressiveICD-10 D18.0

Kaposiform haemangioendothelioma

KHE; tufted angioma (closely related entity, often treated within the same spectrum); "haemangioendothelioma" (older umbrella term)

Kaposiform haemangioendothelioma (KHE) is a rare, locally aggressive vascular tumour that classically presents in infancy or early childhood as a violaceous, indurated plaque or mass with infiltrative deep extension into soft tissue, fascia and underlying organs. Its clinical importance, however, lies in its association with the Kasabach-Merritt phenomenon (KMP) โ€” a life-threatening consumptive coagulopathy with severe thrombocytopenia, hypofibrinogenaemia and microangiopathic haemolysis arising from intratumoral platelet trapping and consumption โ€” which complicates ~70% of KHE cases and carries a 10โ€“30% mortality. KHE rarely metastasises but local mortality is substantial through KMP-related haemorrhage and infiltrative organ compromise. Sirolimus (mTOR inhibitor) has revolutionised treatment, with vincristine and corticosteroid-based regimens remaining the alternative first-line.

CurrentLast reviewed 26 April 2026

Clinical features

  • Violaceous, indurated, ill-defined plaque, mass or "bruise-like" infiltrate, often with overlying ecchymotic discolouration.
  • Distribution โ€” extremities (especially upper limb, trunk, head/neck, retroperitoneum); often deep-seated with overlying superficial component.
  • Onset typically in infancy (~50% congenital) or early childhood; less commonly in adults.
  • M:F roughly equal.
  • Rapid initial growth, then slower expansion; may infiltrate fascia, muscle and underlying organs.
  • Complications:
    • Kasabach-Merritt phenomenon (KMP) โ€” life-threatening consumptive coagulopathy in ~70% โ€” see next section.
    • Local infiltration, pain, functional impairment of the affected limb.
    • Lymphoedema after resolution of the active phase.
  • Differential โ€” infantile haemangioma (much more common, GLUT1+, no KMP); congenital haemangioma; tufted angioma (overlapping spectrum); cutaneous angiosarcoma (rare in children).

Kasabach-Merritt phenomenon (KMP)

  • Life-threatening consumptive coagulopathy occurring in ~70% of KHE.
  • Pathogenesis โ€” intratumoral platelet trapping and consumption, with secondary fibrinogen consumption and microangiopathic haemolysis.
  • Laboratory features:
    • Severe thrombocytopenia (often <10 ร— 10โน/L).
    • Hypofibrinogenaemia.
    • Elevated D-dimer.
    • Microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia (schistocytes, low haptoglobin).
  • Clinical โ€” bleeding from biopsy / venepuncture sites, intratumoral haemorrhage with sudden tumour expansion, GI / CNS / pulmonary haemorrhage.
  • Mortality 10โ€“30% in untreated cases.
  • Important โ€” KMP is associated with KHE and tufted angioma, NOT with infantile haemangioma.

Histology & molecular

  • Infiltrative ill-defined nodules of slit-like vascular channels and spindled endothelial cells with focal "kaposiform" architecture (resembling Kaposi sarcoma) and microthrombi within vascular spaces.
  • "Glomeruloid" tufts of capillaries โ€” reminiscent of tufted angioma.
  • Endothelial markers โ€” CD31+, CD34+, ERG+, FLI-1+; D2-40+ (lymphatic).
  • GLUT1 NEGATIVE โ€” distinguishes KHE / tufted angioma from infantile haemangioma (GLUT1+).
  • HHV-8 negative (excludes Kaposi sarcoma).
  • Recurrent GNA14 somatic mutations described.

Management

  • Multidisciplinary โ€” paediatric haematology / oncology, vascular anomalies team, dermatology, plastic surgery.
  • Refer urgently to a specialist vascular anomalies / paediatric oncology centre.
  • First-line: sirolimus (mTOR inhibitor) โ€” has revolutionised KHE treatment; oral once daily; highly effective for both tumour shrinkage and KMP resolution; well-tolerated; trough monitoring.
  • Alternative first-line: vincristine ยฑ corticosteroids (historic standard) โ€” IV vincristine weekly for 6+ months; high-dose oral / IV corticosteroids during initial KMP.
  • Other systemic options โ€” interferon-ฮฑ (seizures and neurological side effects in infants โ€” caution); propranolol (less effective in KHE than in infantile haemangioma); aspirin / ticlopidine.
  • Platelet transfusion is reserved for active bleeding only โ€” repeated transfusion fuels intratumoral consumption.
  • Cryoprecipitate / fresh frozen plasma for hypofibrinogenaemia and active bleeding.
  • Surgical excision rarely feasible due to infiltrative growth; reserved for residual disease after medical control or focal symptomatic lesions.
  • Embolisation in selected cases.
  • Long-term surveillance for residual disease, lymphoedema and functional impairment.

Prognosis

Local mortality 10โ€“30% in the era before sirolimus; substantially improved with modern multidisciplinary care. Distant metastasis is exceptionally rare. Long-term sequelae โ€” residual mass, lymphoedema, functional impairment, persistent KMP-related coagulopathy in some.

References

  1. Drolet BA et al. Consensus-derived practice standards plan for complicated kaposiform hemangioendothelioma. J Pediatr; 2013.
  2. Adams DM et al. Efficacy and safety of sirolimus in the treatment of complicated vascular anomalies. Pediatrics; 2016.

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