L. Brambilla et al., PERSISTENTLY RECURRING MEDITERRANEAN KAPOSIS-SARCOMA ON SKIN-GRAFTS, International journal of dermatology, 35(5), 1996, pp. 362-364
In May of 1985, we first saw a 79-year-old woman with Mediterranean Ka
posi's sarcoma (Ks). It had first appeared in 1983 on the left leg and
thigh. In March 1984, the lesions were treated with high-velocity ele
ctrons (9MeV) to four contiguous fields (25 x 30 cm, 25 x 30 cm, 12 x
14 cm, and 11 x 14 cm), a total dose of 60 Gy per field, to the left e
xtremity (3rd distal pretibial region, dorsal foot and region of the A
chilles tendon). When we first saw the patient, she had a chronic radi
o-dermatitis on the lower third of the left leg, with an extensive and
deep ulcer (10 x 15 cm), exposing the tendon insertion of the anterio
r tibial muscle (Fig. 1). Karposi's sarcoma which had previously regre
ssed after radiotherapy, had also recurred in the form of nodules on t
he pretibial region along the edge of the ulcer and on the left planta
r region. The nodules were treated with intralesional infiltration of
vincristine (VCR) according to our usual schedule(25) and complete rem
ission (CR) of all lesions was obtained within 3 months. After the Ks
nodules disappeared, a successful total-thickness graft for the ulcer
was performed. In April 1987, some biopsy-proven nodules of Ks (Fig. 2
) appeared on the site of the graft; they regressed within 2 months af
ter local infiltration of VCR. After about 18 months, there were ulcer
ating flourishing lesions of Ks that had developed al the same site (F
ig. 3). At this time the lesions were resistant to intralesional treat
ment, but sensitive to vinblastine (VLB), 9 mg Iv, every 4 weeks, with
complete remission in March, 1990. In January 1990, a second radioder
matitis ulcer appeared (Fig. 4), confined to the upper margin of the f
irst graft; this required another graft in which a new Kaposi's nodule
arose 3 months later (Fig. 5); the nodules regressed after intralesio
nal treatment with VCR. In December 1990, a third ulcer appeared in th
e region of the left Achilles heel; it was covered with a skin graft t
hat did not survive. In September 1991, the patient was given another
graft at the same site with partially favorable results. Three months
after the procedure, there was again a Ks recurrence in the graft site
; this is at present in CR after intralesional treatment with VCR.