Kaposi's Sarcoma
By Dr Salim Amour
Kaposi's
sarcoma (KS) is a type of cancer. Tumors with tiny new
blood vessels grow below the surface of the skin and in membranes of your
mouth, nose, eyes, and anus. It can spread to your lungs, liver, stomach,
intestines, and lymph nodes, which are glands that help you fight infection.
Researchers have found that Kaposi's
sarcoma is caused by a herpes virus, HHV-8, also called KSHV. It affects 8
times more men than women. It may spread through sexual contact, but we don't
know for sure.
KS was once rare, affecting older men from
Eastern European or Mediterranean families, young African men, or people who
had undergone organ transplants. Now HIV is the most common cause.
Kaposi's sarcoma and HIV
Because people with HIV have weakened
immune systems, they're more likely to develop certain cancers, including KS.
Most severe cases happen when someone has AIDS, the late stage of HIV
infection, but skin lesions can also show up earlier. They're a sign your
immune system isn't at full strength.
Skin lesions tend to get worse when you
also have other infections.
Treating the HIV virus with antiretroviral
therapy (ART) is the best way to treat KS, too, especially early on. Anti-HIV
drugs have dropped the rate of KS cases by 80%-90% from the beginning of the
AIDS epidemic in the early 1980s.
Symptoms
The most visible signs of Kaposi's sarcoma
are lesions on the skin: flat, painless spots that are red or purple on white
skin and bluish, brownish, or black on dark skin. Unlike bruises, they don't
turn white when you press on them. They aren't itchy, and they don't drain.
They're not life-threatening.
New spots may show up each week. For some
people, these lesions change slowly. They may grow into raised bumps or grow
together.
When KS spreads elsewhere, it can be
life-threatening. You may have:
- Trouble eating or swallowing
- Queasiness, vomiting, and belly pain from bleeding
and blockages inside
- Severe swelling in your arms, legs, face, or scrotum
- Serious coughing or shortness of breath
Diagnosis
Your doctor may diagnose Kaposi's sarcoma
simply by looking at your skin. To confirm it, he may take a sample of tissue
from a spot and look at it under a microscope, which is called a biopsy.
If you have trouble breathing, your doctor
may use a thin tube with a light (a bronchoscope) to look into your breathing
passages. Or, if you have tummy troubles, he may want to look inside your guts
through a lighted tube during a procedure called an endoscopy.
Treatment
Your treatment will depend on how many
lesions you have and how big they are and where they are, as well as how well
your immune system is working.
In many cases, ART is the best way to treat
active Kaposi's sarcoma. It may even clear up the skin lesions.
If you have just a few, you could have them
removed. That won't cure you, but it can make your skin look better. Your
doctor can cut the tissue out or freeze it to destroy it.
Radiation can kill the cancer cells or keep
them from growing. A machine can direct it toward your body, or your doctor may
put radioactive needles, seeds, or wires inside you near the cancer.
Once KS has spread, you'll need meds that
go throughout your whole body to kill the cancer. Chemotherapy drugs for
Kaposi's sarcoma include:
- Doxorubicin (Dox-SL, Doxil, Evacet, LipoDox)
- Paclitaxel (Taxol)
- Vinblastine (Velban, Velsar)
Chemotherapy can have side effects,
including hair loss, vomiting, and fatigue. If you're HIV-positive, you also
need to consider that chemo can lower your platelet and white-blood-cell
counts, and raise your chances of an infection.
Another type of drug treatment, called
biological therapy, works by boosting your immune system. Your doctor may
prescribe interferon alfa (Intron A) if your CD4 cell count is over 200 and you
have a fairly healthy immune system.
Targeted therapies, such as monoclonal
antibody therapy and tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), are being tested in
clinical trials. These try to attack the cancer and keep it from growing
without harming healthy cells
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