A 49 year old Caucasian man presented with a history of 4-5 months of progressive right nasal congestion and more recently some slight epistaxis. He was post op two weeks for a partial colectomy for colon cancer. He does have allergies but does not get sinus infections perse.
His head and neck examination was normal except for a deviated septum convex to the right. In addition, there was a mass in the right nostril which looked more like an inverted papilloma than a polyp. A CT scan showed a right nasal mass near the head of the inferior turbinate.
He was subsequently taken to the operating room where the mass was found to be attached to the septum. It was completely excised with clear margins without difficulty. The final pathology report proved to be an angiofibroma.
In follow up, the area healed nicely with no evidence of residual or recurrent disease.
Of note, he continues to get chemo therapy for his sigmoid colon carcinoma.
Juvenile angiofibromas generally occur nearly exclusively in adolescent males, usually presenting either with recurrent epistaxis and or nasal obstruction[1]. As the tumor enlarges other symptoms may develop such as eustachian tube dysfunction, proptosis, diplopia, and cheek swelling.
Nasal examination at this time will usually reveal a unilateral nasopharyngeal mass.
The tumor is extremely vascular on imaging either by CT or MRI. Because of this, it is often treated with embolization preoperatively.
Typically, now the tumor is removed endoscopically unless it has spread to an area that cannot be reached by that method.
The tumor appears to arise from the pterygoid plates and studies have shown that drilling them down at the end of the procedure markedly reduces the recurrence rate[2].
Juvenile angiofibroma have been reported in other age groups but at least 90% are in adolescent males.
To our knowledge this is the first repórted case of an angiofibroma arising from the nasal septum in an adult male.
Figure1
References
Lopez F et al: Nasal juvenile an iofibroma: Current perspectives with emphasis on management. Head Neck 2017; 39:1033-1045
Huang Y et al: Surgical management of juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma. Laryngoscope 2014; 124: 1942-1946.