| Literature DB >> 22312541 |
Tamer Altay1, Khaled M Krisht, William T Couldwell.
Abstract
The sellar and parasellar (SPS) region is a complex area rich in vital neurovascular structures and as such may be the location of first manifestation of a systemic malignancy. Metastases to this region are rare; breast cancer is the most common source among those that metastasize to the SPS region. Ophthalmoplegia, headache, retroorbital or facial pain, diabetes insipidus, and visual field defects are the most commonly reported symptoms. Lack of specific clinical and radiological features renders SPS metastases difficult to differentiate from the other frequently encountered lesions in this area, especially when there is no known history of a primary disease. Currently accepted management is multimodality therapy that includes biopsy and/or palliative surgical resection, radiation, and chemotherapy. Although no significant survival benefits have been shown by the surgical series, surgical resection may improve quality of life. Here we review the relevant literature and present six illustrative cases from our own institution.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22312541 PMCID: PMC3263702 DOI: 10.1155/2012/647256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Surg Oncol ISSN: 2090-1402
Clinical, endocrine, and radiological features of 6 patients with metastatic tumors of the sellar/parasellar region.
| Patient | Age | Sex | Presenting symptoms | Symptom duration | Primary disease | Metastatic lesion | Location | Management | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 77 | m | Retroorbital pain | 4 months | Prostate cancer | Prostate cancer | CS and sella extending to inferior orbital fissure and upper clivus | Transsphenoidal biopsy, radiotherapy, chemotherapy | Stable neurological findings at two months |
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| 2 | 82 | f | Hearing loss | Several weeks | Breast cancer | Breast cancer | Petrous apex extending to Meckel's cave, lateral CS, and IAC | Transcranial biopsy, radiotherapy, chemotherapy | N/A |
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| 3* | 79 | m | Cranial nerve III and VI palsies | Several weeks | Prostate cancer | Melanoma | Bilateral CS, sella, clivus, and posterior nasal cavity | Transsphenoidal biopsy | N/A |
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| 4 | 21 | m | Horner's syndrome | 1 month | Osteosarcoma | Renal cell cancer | CS extending to sphenoid sinus, pterygopalatine fossa, and optic canal | Radiation, chemotherapy | N/A |
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| 5 | 42 | f | Gait instability | 1 month | Unknown | Lymphoma | Sellar/suprasellar lesion with bilateral CS, medial sphenoid wing, and clivus involvement | Transsphenoidal biopsy, chemotherapy, possible radiotherapy | N/A |
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| 6 | 57 | f | Decreased visual acuity | 1 month | Breast cancer | Breast cancer | Greater sphenoid wing extending to the anterior clinoidal process with the optic nerve encasement | Transcranial decompression of optic nerve and the CS, radiotherapy with possible chemotherapy | Stable neurological findings and primary disease at one year |
CS: cavernous sinus, IAC: internal acoustic canal, N/A: not available
*Patient was previously presented in McCutcheon et al.
Figure 1Axial and coronal T1-weighted MR imaging of the brain with gadolinium enhancement showing a heterogeneously enhancing mass involving the sella with invasion into the left cavernous sinus and the superior clivus.
Figure 2Axial and coronal T1-weighted MR imaging of the brain with gadolinium enhancement demonstrating a heterogeneously enhancing left petrous apex mass with extension into the adjacent middle cranial fossa and cerebellar pontine angle.
Figure 3Axial and coronal T1-weighted MR imaging with gadolinium enhancement showing a homogenously enhancing soft tissue mass involving the clivus, pituitary fossa, cavernous sinus, and posterior nasal cavity.
Figure 4Axial and coronal T1-weighted, gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging revealing a homogenously enhancing lobulated lesion centered within the right sphenoid sinus with extension into the carotid canal, pterygopalatine fossa, and optic nerve canal.
Figure 5Axial and coronal T1-weighted MR imaging of the brain with gadolinium enhancement demonstrating a heterogeneously enhancing lobulated sellar and suprasellar lesion with extension into the right cavernous sinus and encasement of the right internal carotid artery.