| Literature DB >> 22500202 |
Hyun Seok Lee1, Jong Hyun Kim, Jung-Il Lee.
Abstract
We report a patient who underwent gamma knife radiosurgery to treat recurrent meningioma after microsurgery and thereafter developed secondary malignancy adjacent to the original tumor. A 47-year-old woman had underwent resection of the olfactory groove meningioma. Then radiosurgery was done three times over 4 year period for the recurrent tumor. After 58 months from the initial radiosurgery, she presented with headache and progressive mental dullness. Huge tumor in bifrontal location was revealed in MRI. Subsequent operation and pathological examination confirmed diagnosis of glioblastoma. This case fits the criteria of radiation-induced tumor and the clinical implication of the issue is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Glioblastoma; Radiosurgery
Year: 2012 PMID: 22500202 PMCID: PMC3322216 DOI: 10.3340/jkns.2012.51.2.98
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Korean Neurosurg Soc ISSN: 1225-8245
Fig. 1T1-weighted contrast enhanced magnetic resonance image showing well enhanced frontal meningioma upon the olfactory groove.
Fig. 2First Gamma Knife Surgery planning for meningioma which maximum radiating doses were 30 Gy on July 2004 (A) and 25 Gy on May 2007 (B) and 28 Gy on May 2009 (C).
Fig. 3T1-weighted contrast enhanced magnetic resonance image demonstrating a mass with peripheral enhancement and central necrosis involving both frontal lobes with extension into the corpus callosum after 58 months from diagnosis of GM.
Fig. 4Photomicrographs of the lesion demonstrate an infiltrating glial neoplasm comprised of highly atypical cells with pleomorphic angular nuclei and modest eosinophilic cytoplasm consistent with astrocytic lineage. Numerous mitoses and tumoral necrosis are present. This presentation is compatible with a glioblastoma.
Summary of the radiosurgery induced malignant brain tumor described in literature (including our case)
Date of treatment : at time of the first radiosurgery, Dose : marginal doses or cumulative doses, Interval : time from radiosurgery to second tumor diagnosis, VS : vestibular schwannoma, AVM : ateriovenous malformation, MNG : meningioma, GBM : glioblastoma multiforme, MS : malignant schwannoma, MPNST : malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor, GKS : gamma knife radiosurgery