| Literature DB >> 23919255 |
Guishan Jin1, Shuyu Hao, Jian Xie, Ruifang Mi, Fusheng Liu.
Abstract
Collision tumors of the sellar region are relatively uncommon and consist mainly of more than one type of pituitary adenoma or a cyst or cystic tumor. The association of a pituitary adenoma and a craniopharyngioma is particularly rare. This study describes a rare occurrence in which a pituitary adenoma and a craniopharyngioma coexisted in the sellar region. The case involves a 47-year-old woman who underwent transsphenoidal surgery with subtotal tumor resection and reoperation using an interhemispheric transcallosal approach for total microsurgical resection of the tumor because the visual acuity in her left eye had re-deteriorated. Histopathological and immunohistochemical examinations of the excised tissue revealed a pituitary adenoma in the first operation and a craniopharyngioma in the second operation. Retrospective analysis found the coexistence of a pituitary adenoma and a craniopharyngioma, known as a collision tumor. Instead of the transsphenoidal approach, a craniotomy should be performed, to explore the suprasellar region.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23919255 PMCID: PMC3750462 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-11-178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Figure 1Preoperative images of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. (A) Sagittal CT showing isodensity or slightly higher density in the sellar and suprasellar areas (arrow indicates the cystic mass in the suprasellar areas). (B,C) Transverse MRI showing a short T1-weighted signal in the sellar area and prepontine cistern and a short T2-weighted signal (arrows indicate the mass). (D-F) Contrast MRI showing an enhanced mass in the sellar and suprasellar areas with a cystic mass in the prepontine cistern (D,F; arrows indicate the mass. E; arrow indicates the cystic mass in the prepontine cistern).
Figure 2Photomicrographs of the pathological specimen. (A) Features of pituitary adenoma (H &E, ×100). Negative immunohistochemical staining for: (B) growth hormone, (C) prolactin, (D) follicle-stimulating hormone, (E) thyroid-stimulating hormone, (F) luteinizing hormone, (G) ACTH.
Figure 3Post-operative MRI scan showing subtotal tumor resection (arrow indicated the enlarged cystic mass).
Figure 4CT and MRI scans 11 months after the first operation. (A) Sagittal CT showing the isodensity in the suprasellar area and the prepontine cistern (arrow). (B) MRI showing a partial contrasting mass in the suprasellar area (arrow).
Figure 5Photomicrographs of the pathological specimen showing the features of craniopharyngioma: (A) wet keratin (arrow, H & E, ×100), (B) multiple layers of squamous epithelium (H & E, ×200).
Figure 6Sagittal T1-weighted MRI scan obtained 3 months after second surgery, revealing total tumor resection.
Literature review for the coexistence of pituitary adenoma with craniopharyngioma
| 1. [ | 1971 | 29, male | Acromegaly | | Right frontal craniotomy, Pituitary adenoma and craniopharyngioma | Diabetes insipidus | Somatotroph | Died 4 days after operation; uncontrolled diabetes insipidus |
| 2. [ | 1981 | 57, male | | Destructive growth pattern | Craniotomy (March 1979) partial removal of craniopharyngioma | 2nd surgery : Craniotomy due to regrowth of craniopharyngioma (December 1979) | Prolactin | Died 10 days after operation; cardiac arrest. Chromophobic adenoma (prolactinoma) and chordoma (both post mortem findings) |
| 3. [ | 1986 | 61, male | Deteriorating vision, 9 months | + | Subfrontal approach, Craniopharyngioma | Visual acuity deteriorated 2 months post-operatively | Prolactin | Autopsy confirmed pituitary adenoma |
| Died from cardiac arrest. | ||||||||
| 4. [ | 1986 | 32, female | Amenorrhea, lactation, acromegaly, 3 months | + | Transsphenoidal, Pituitary adenoma | 1st surgery: headache and visual acuity deteriorated 1 month post-operatively | Prolactin and growth hormone | Not known |
| 2nd surgery: right frontal craniotomy for craniopharyngioma | ||||||||
| 5. [ | 1987 | 47, male | Deteriorating vision | + | Transsphenoidal, Pituitary adenoma | 1st surgery: visual acuity deteriorated 1 month post-operatively 2nd surgery: interhemispheric approach without pathological changes | Prolactin | Not known |
| 3rd surgery: bifrontal craniotomy for craniopharyngioma | ||||||||
| 6. [ | 1987 | 36, male | Deteriorating vision, 18 months | | Transsphenoidal Pituitary adenoma | 1st surgery: headache and visual acuity deteriorated 2 months post-operatively | Nonfunctional adenoma | Not known |
| 2nd surgery: craniotomy for craniopharyngioma | ||||||||
| 7. [ | 1988 | 62, female | Personality change, 2 months | + | Right frontoparietal parasagittal craniotomy and radiotherapy, Craniopharyngioma | Lethargy, ataxia, incontinence, polyuria and polydipsia 12 months post-operatively | Prolactin | Autopsy confirmed lactotroph hyperplasia and microprolactinoma |
| Died from pulmonary embolism | ||||||||
| 8. [ | 2008 | 29, male | Atrial fibrillation, 24 months | − | Transsphenoidal Composite, pituitary adenoma and craniopharyngioma | Not known | Thyroid-stimulating hormone | Not known |
| 9. [ | 2008 | 50, male | Headache, difficulty sleeping, decreased libido | + | Transsphenoidal, Pituitary adenoma and craniopharyngioma | Hypogonadal | Gonadotrophic hormone | No recurrence in 4 years |
| 10. [ | 2009 | 59, male | Progressive vision loss | | Subtotal transcranial resection | Transient diabetes insipidus | Gonadotrophic hormone | Not known |
| 11. [ | 2009 | 12, male | Partial hypopituitarism | + | Right frontal craniotomy, Composite craniopharyngioma and pituitary adenoma | Uneventful | Silent pituitary adenoma subtype 3 | MRI performed 8 months post-operatively; 10 months after operation no tumor recurrence |
| 12. [ | 2009 | 47, male | Headache and vision loss, years | − | Transsphenoidal, Composite pituitary adenoma and craniopharyngioma | Uneventful | Nonfunctional adenoma | No recurrence in 1 year |
| 13. [ | 2013 | 75, female | Diplopia | + | Transsphenoidal, Composite pituitary adenoma and craniopharyngioma | Uneventful | Silent type 2, ACTH | No recurrence in 10 months |
| 14. Present case | 2009 | 47, female | Deteriorating vision, 5 months | + | Transsphenoidal, Pituitary adenoma | 1st surgery: visual acuity deteriorated 9 months post-operatively | prolactin and ACTH | No recurrence in 2 years |
| 2nd surgery: interhemispheric transcallosal approach |
ACTH adrenocorticotropic hormone.