# A Massive Cavernous Mediastinal Haemangioma Causing Superior Vena Cava Obstruction and Extending to the Supraclavicular Space: A Case Report

**Authors:** Antonios Charokopos, Andreas Granitsas, Georgios T Stathopoulos, Irene Zarvou, Stella Petrou, Pinelopi Anagnostopoulou, Nikos Chondros, Elena Theofanous, Konstantinos Markakis, Tonia Adamides

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.104374 · 2026-02-27

## TL;DR

This case report describes a rare, large mediastinal haemangioma causing severe vein blockage and extending to the neck area in a young man.

## Contribution

The paper presents a unique case of a massive cavernous haemangioma with extensive vascular involvement and management challenges.

## Key findings

- The haemangioma caused aneurysmal dilatation of the superior vena cava and a large collateral venous network.
- MRI and CT confirmed the mass as a cavernous haemangioma, with histology providing definitive diagnosis.
- Embolisation was recommended due to venous-phase extravasation and worsening superior vena cava diameter.

## Abstract

Mediastinal haemangiomas are exceptionally rare, benign vascular tumours and account for a very small proportion of all mediastinal masses. Their symptomatology ranges from an incidental finding to significant mass-mediated compression of vital thoracic structures.

We report a unique case of a massive mediastinal cavernous haemangioma with supraclavicular and axillary extension, which led to central venous obstruction. A 24-year-old man, with a childhood history of a resected supraclavicular cyst, was found to have a symptomatic right-sided heterogeneous mediastinal mass. Computed tomography (CT) angiography identified the hypervascular mass extending from the anterior mediastinum to the supraclavicular fossa, which caused aneurysmal dilatation of the superior vena cava (SVC), with an extensive collateral venous network. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) appearance was highly suggestive of a haemangioma, with three interconnecting regions of sizes 7.5 × 6 cm, 9 × 5 cm, and 8.5 × 1.6 cm. The mass was histologically confirmed by transthoracic needle biopsy as a cavernous haemangioma. Due to signs of venous-phase extravasation into the mediastinum and worsening SVC diameter, embolisation was recommended after a comprehensive multidisciplinary meeting.

Our radiopathologic case highlights the diagnostic intricacies of differentiating extremely bulky, but benign, haemangiomas from aggressive mediastinal malignancies. Although surgical excision is the gold standard, the involvement of critical structures, like the SVC, necessitates multidisciplinary discussion and consideration of alternative treatment approaches.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** benign vascular tumours (MESH:D019043), mediastinal masses (MESH:D008477), supraclavicular cyst (MESH:D003560), aneurysmal (MESH:D000783), Mediastinal (MESH:D008480), venous obstruction (MESH:D006502)

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13033231/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13033231