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The halo sign

Sinal do halo

Edson Marchiori1,2, Bruno Hochhegger3,4, Gláucia Zanetti2,5

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1806-37562016000000354

A 49-year-old male smoker (with a smoking history of 90 pack-years) presented with vague complaints of dyspnea. La-boratory test results were normal. Serology for HIV was negative. A CT scan of the chest showed a nodule with the halo sign in the left lower lobe (Figure 1). Fungal serology was negative.

 






The halo sign is a nonspecific CT finding consisting of a halo of ground-glass opacity surrounding a nodule or, less commonly, a mass or a rounded area of consolidation.



In most cases, a halo of ground-glass opacity represents perinodular hemorrhage. In cases of angioinvasive aspergillo-sis (AIA), for example, a nodule represents pulmonary infarction secondary to fungal angioinvasion and a surrounding halo of ground-glass opacity represents perinodular alveolar hemorrhage. In other infectious processes, the halo sign represents perilesional inflammatory infiltration. In cases of adenocarcinoma, the halo sign represents tumor cell prolifer-ation along the alveolar septa, the pulmonary architecture being preserved (lepidic growth). The same features can be seen in some cases of metastatic adenocarcinoma (particularly in cases of adenocarcinoma originating from the gastroin-testinal tract or pancreas).



As an initial diagnostic approach, it is useful to determine patient immune status. In immunocompromised patients, the halo sign is most commonly due to infectious diseases, the most common being invasive fungal diseases, such as AIA. Therefore, in the presence of febrile neutropenia, especially in patients with hematological malignancies and in bone marrow transplant recipients, AIA is the major cause of the halo sign. In such cases, the halo sign is considered to consti-tute early evidence of AIA, warranting initiation of antifungal therapy before serologic test results are known. Early diag-nosis is essential because the disease is associated with high mortality rates. In immunocompetent patients, especially asymptomatic patients and smokers, bronchial carcinoma, particularly lepidic adenocarcinoma (formerly known as bron-chioloalveolar carcinoma), is the major cause of the halo sign. The differential diagnosis should also include the follow-ing: hemorrhagic metastases, particularly those related to angiosarcomas and choriocarcinomas; lymphomas; Kaposi's sarcoma; bacterial infections (including tuberculosis and actinomycosis); fungal infections (including candidiasis, mu-cormycosis, cryptococcosis, histoplasmosis, and paracoccidioidomycosis); viral infections (including infection with cyto-megalovirus, herpes simplex virus, and varicella-zoster virus); sarcoidosis; granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener's granulomatosis); and organizing pneumonia.



Although the halo sign is a nonspecific finding with a broad differential diagnosis, the differential diagnosis can be con-siderably narrowed by correlating clinical data, laboratory test results, and associated CT findings. However, in many cases, a final diagnosis requires histopathological examination. In our patient, a biopsy revealed adenocarcinoma with a lepidic growth pattern.



RECOMMENDED READING



1. Fraser RS, Müller NL, Colman NC, Pare PD, editors. Diagnosis of Diseases of the Chest. 4th ed. Philadelphia: WB Saunders Company; 1999.

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