Giant intra-cardiac undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma: a case report

European Heart Journal - Case Reports

16 May 2026
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ESC Journals IMAGING Cardiac Computed Tomography (CT) Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR) Cross-Modality and Multi-Modality Imaging Topics Echocardiography Nuclear Imaging

Abstract

AbstractBackground

Primary cardiac tumours are rare. Though most are benign, they significantly interfere with cardiac function. Malignant tumours, predominantly sarcomas, include the highly aggressive undifferentiated pleomorphic cardiac sarcoma that often manifests with non-specific symptoms.

Case Summary

A 72-year-old man presented with weeks-long fatigue, appetite loss, and chronic dyspnoea (NYHA III) following a previous acute coronary syndrome and occupational exposure to toxic solvents. His examination revealed dyspnoea and elevated blood pressure, while imaging uncovered a large intracavitary mass at the junction of the inferior vena cava and right atrium. Multiple metastatic lesions to the pleura, lung, pericardium, and lymph nodes were identified on CT, PET-CT, and MRI, with ultrasound confirming significant tricuspid stenosis caused by the mass. Histopathological analysis of a pleural metastasis established the diagnosis of an undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma.

Discussion

Comprehensive imaging modalities (CT, PET-CT, MRI, ultrasound) are essential for characterizing cardiac masses and staging malignancy. Although surgical resection is the primary treatment, palliative chemotherapy with agents such as pazopanib, carboplatin, gemcitabine, and docetaxel is employed due to widespread metastases and poor prognosis. Undifferentiated pleomorphic cardiac sarcomas remain diagnostically challenging, with treatment focused on symptom relief and palliative care in advanced disease. Early detection remains vital for quality of life.

Contributors

Panagiotis Antiochos
Panagiotis Antiochos

Author

University Hospital Centre Vaudois (CHUV) Lausanne , Switzerland

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