Infantile hemangioma is a proliferation of β4-negative endothelial cells adjacent to HLA-DR-Positive cells with dendritic cell morphology

2004 
Abstract Although hemangioma is referred as to the most common tumor in infancy, the underlying pathogenetic events and the biologic origin of this benign vascular neoplasm have remained obscure. By using immunohistochemistry on frozen sections of infantile hemangiomas, we show here that proliferating endothelial cells abundantly expressed α v β 3 but lacked β 4 integrins. Instead, regressing and involuting infantile hemangiomas due to treatment with IFN-α showed positive staining of β 4 integrin, which might point to the angiogenic significance of β 4 integrin in infantile hemangiomas. Moreover, immunofluorescence analysis revealed the existence of HLA-DR + , mostly CD68 + and partly DC-SIGN/CD209 + cells with dendritic cell morphology in the intimate vicinity of hemangiomatous vessels. Such cells were also detected in the dermal microvascular unit in normal skin. The coupled occurrence of vascular structures and perivascular cells that were stained positive with markers of monocyte or macrophage or dendritic cells might suggest that the development of infantile hemangioma is a result of vasculogenesis, that is, the formation of primitive blood vessels from angioblasts, rather than of angiogenesis, that is, the sprouting of capillaries from preexisting vessels.
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