| Literature DB >> 22995128 |
Manuel Eduardo Ribeiro da Silva1, Manuel João Queiroz de Fariados Santos Carvalho, António Pedro Cacho Rodrigues, Nuno Silva Morais Neves, António Moura Gonçalves, Rui Alexandre Peixoto Pinto, Davide Carvalho.
Abstract
Paragangliomas are rare tumours with a prevalence of 1/10000 to 1/30000. Tumors arising from the paraganglia are characteristically of low malignant potential. Vertebral metastases are exceedingly rare, and only isolated case reports have described them. The authors present the clinical course of a 47 years-old female patient with a familial paraganglioma [PGL] with vertebral metastastization, who underwent an intralesional tumor excision and corpectomy. Genetic screening demonstrated a new germinal frameshift mutation of the SDHB exon 6 [c.587-591DelC]. After surgery there was normalization of the analytical parameters and imagiologic screening. One year later she presented a new image in the the pedicle of T11 on the contralateral side of the surgical incision. She performed 2 treatments with MIBG and 1 cicle of radiotherapy that made the new lesion regress. Currently the patient does not present any clinical or analytical evidence of new metastasis.This case outlines the clinical course of a patient with a PGL syndrome for whom a rare vertebral metastasis was diagnosed. It highlights the importance of identifying patients with germline SDHB mutations, as these patients are at a high risk of developing malignant disease.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22995128 PMCID: PMC3487740 DOI: 10.1186/1897-4287-10-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hered Cancer Clin Pract ISSN: 1731-2302 Impact factor: 2.857
Figure 1Cintigraphy revealing a solitary hyperfixation on T11.
Figure 2A well delimited lytic lesion on the left side of T11 body was observed on CT scan. This lesion conditioned a narrowing of the vertebral canal, with slight compression of the spinal cord. Arrow indicating the lesion.
Figure 3On MRI this expansive lesion with low signal in T1 WI and high signal in T2 WI conditioned left root compression and enhanced after gadolinium injection. These features suggest the diagnosis of a malignant lesion, most probably a metastasis. Arrow indicating the lesion.
Figure 4Post Op x-ray after corpectomy, replacement with an interbody spacer, autologous graft and a lateral plate.