| Literature DB >> 22084751 |
Carlos R Goulart1, Tobias Alecio Mattei, Ricardo Ramina.
Abstract
Malignant melanoma represents the third most common cause for cerebral metastases after breast and lung cancer. Central nervous system (CNS) metastases occur in 10 to 40% of patients with melanoma. Most of the symptoms of CNS melanoma metastases are unspecific and depend on localization of the lesion. All patients with new neurological signs and a previous primary melanoma lesion must be investigated. Although primary diagnosis may rely on computed tomography scan, magnetic resonance images are usually used in order to study more precisely the characteristics of the lesions in and to embase the surgical plan. Other possible complementary exams are: positron emission tomography, iofetamine cintilography, immunohistochemistry of liquor, monoclonal antibody immunocytology, optical coherence tomography, and transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Treatment procedures are indicated based on patient clinical status, presence of unique or multiple lesions, and family agreement. Often surgery, radiosurgery, whole brain radiotherapy, and chemotherapy are combined in order to obtain longer remissions and optimal symptom relieve. Corticoids may be also useful in those cases that present with remarkable peritumoral edema and important mass effect. Despite of the advance in therapeutic options, prognosis for patients with melanoma brain metastases remains poor with a median survival time of six months after diagnosis.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22084751 PMCID: PMC3197072 DOI: 10.5402/2011/276908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Surg ISSN: 2090-5785
Figure 1(a) axial T1-Weighted MRI after injection of Gadolinium, demonstrating an intraparietal lesion with heterogeneous appearance, presenting hypersignal intercalted with necrotic areas. (b) The same lesion in a coronal view.
Figure 2CT demonstrating multiple melanoma metastatic lesions. Observe the typical hyperintense signal and the corticosubcortical localization. Note also the presence of an external derivation catheter in left ventricle as an attempt to alleviate intracranial hypertension.
Figure 3Sequence of surgical photos showing intraparietal exposition of a CNS metastatical melanoma lesion and its surgical excision.
List of available diagnostic methods, their specific utility and Results which suggeest CNS melanoma metastasis.
| Diagnostic methods | Suggestive result | Specific utility |
|---|---|---|
| Computed tomography | Hyperdense lesion | Primary exam |
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| Magnectic resonance Images | Hyperintense lesion on T1 and hypointense lesion on T2-weighted images | More detailed exam |
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| Optical coherence tomography | Increased optical backscatter | Intraoperatory exam |
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| Positron emission tomography | High captation of compound 18F-10B-LBPA | Noninvasive radiation dose planning |
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| Cintilography | Increased uptake of iofetamine | High sensible method |
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| Immunohistochemistry | Finding of intermediate filament keratin | Differentiating between metastatic melanomas and primary central nervous system tumors |
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| Monoclonal antibody | Raise of fibronectin, beta 2-microglobulin | Diagnosis of metastatic meningeal melanomatosis |
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| Immunocytology | IgM and IgG index, IL-6 and TNF-alpha | Diagnosis of metastatic meningeal melanomatosis |
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| Transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) | Detection of melanoma-associated markers (MAGE-3, MART-1, and tyrosinase) | Diagnosis of subclinical CNS metastases |
List of therapeutic options mean survival and specific indications of each method.
| Treatment modality | Mean Survival | Indications |
|---|---|---|
| Surgical resection | 10,3 months | Limited (up to three) CNS metastases and widespread systemic disease |
| Whole brain irradiation | 2–4 months | Large or multiple metastases |
| Chemotherapy | 8,3 months | Widespread systemic disease and multiple CNS metastasis |
| Stereotactic Radiosurgery | 1 year | Small and solitary lesions |
| Gamma knife surgery | 10,4 months | Small and solitary lesions |
| Boron neutron capture therapy | Still in animal research phase | — |