Literature DB >> 21284750

A glioblastoma arising from the attached region where a meningioma had been totally removed.

Shigeo Ohba1, Kazuhiko Shimizu, Syunsuke Shibao, Tomoru Miwa, Toru Nakagawa, Hikaru Sasaki, Hideki Murakami.   

Abstract

The co-occurrence of different histological tumors in the nervous system is rare and is mainly associated with phakomatoses or radiation exposure. A 72-year-old man underwent surgery for a frontal convexity meningioma. Four years after the surgery, a new lesion was detected in the attached region where the meningioma had been removed. The second tumor exhibited a high degree of cellularity, atypical mitosis, pseudo-palisading and microvascular proliferation, and was immunohistologically positive for GFAP and was diagnosed as a glioblastoma. Wild-type isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 was found in the second specimen. A genetic analysis using comparative genomic hybridization showed a DNA copy number loss on 1p35, 9pter-21, 10, 11q23, 13q, 14q, 20q, 22q and a gain on 7 in the second specimen. Although the mechanism responsible for the consecutive occurrence of meningioma and glioblastoma has not been elucidated, five hypotheses are feasible: (i) the lesions occurred incidentally; (ii) a low-grade astrocytoma present at the time of the first operation transformed into a high-grade glioma during the next 4 years; (iii) radiation received during the endovascular treatment induced glioblastoma; (iv) a brain scar created at the time of the first operation for meningioma led to the occurrence of a glioblastoma; and (v) the previous meningioma affected the surrounding glial cells, causing neoplastic transformation.
© 2011 Japanese Society of Neuropathology.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21284750     DOI: 10.1111/j.1440-1789.2011.01198.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropathology        ISSN: 0919-6544            Impact factor:   1.906


  5 in total

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4.  De novo glioblastoma in the territory of a prior middle cerebral artery infarct.

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5.  De novo glioblastoma in the territory of a recent middle cerebral artery infarction and a residual meningioma: pathogenesis revisited.

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  5 in total

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