Pulmonary inflammatory pseudotumor
Pulmonary inflammatory pseudotumors are solid, non-neoplastic masses which can mimic pulmonary malignancy.
Terminology
They should not be confused with pulmonary pseudotumors which usually refer to loculated collections of pleural fluid mimicking a pulmonary mass on chest radiography.
Pathology
Thought to occur from an uncontrolled response to lung tissue injury. Lesions are typically solitary with a lower lobe predilection.
Pathologically, pulmonary inflammatory pseudotumors are typically well-defined, firm, lobulated parenchymal nodules or masses with a whorled and often heterogeneous appearance on cross-section.
Histologically, there is a proliferation of spindle-shaped fibroblasts and permeation of collagen with lymphocytes, fibrosis, granulomatous inflammation, lymphoid hyperplasia, and intra-alveolar fibrosis at the edge of the lesion.
Radiographic features
Plain radiograph
Features on chest radiographs can vary but frequently mimics a solitary, well-circumscribed, peripheral lung mass with calcifications in situ. May have an anatomical bias for the lower lobes.
CT
CT most commonly shows a well-marginated, lobulated mass of heterogeneous attenuation with variable patterns of contrast enhancement and calcification. Cavitation and lymphadenopathy are rare.
Treatment and prognosis
- some authors advocate resection
Differential diagnosis
The differential can be quite wide, including most of those for a solitary pulmonary nodule, but specific considerations include:
- solitary metastases from an osteosarcoma or mucinous tumor
- intra-thoracic soft tissue sarcoma
- pulmonary hamartoma