| Literature DB >> 25345462 |
Hoonsub So1, Sun A Kim2, Dok Hyun Yoon3, Shin Kwang Khang2, Jihye Hwang4, Chong Hyun Suh5, Cheolwon Suh3.
Abstract
Histiocytic sarcoma is a type of lymphoma that rarely involves the central nervous system (CNS). Its rarity can easily lead to a misdiagnosis. We describe a patient with primary CNS histocytic sarcoma involving the cerebral hemisphere and spinal cord, who had been initially misdiagnosed as demyelinating disease. Two biopsies were necessary before a correct diagnosis was made. A histologic examination showed bizarre shaped histiocytes with larger nuclei and nuclear atypia. The cells were positive for CD68, CD163, and S-100 protein. As a resection was not feasible due to multifocality, he was treated with highdose methotrexate, but showed no response. As a result, he was switched to high dose cytarabine; but again, showed no response. The patient died 2 months from the start of chemotherapy and 8 months from the onset of symptoms. Since few patients with this condition have been described and histopathology is difficult to diagnose, suspicion of the disease is essential.Entities:
Keywords: Central nervous system; Cytarabine; Histiocytic sarcoma; Methotrexate
Year: 2014 PMID: 25345462 PMCID: PMC4398107 DOI: 10.4143/crt.2013.163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 1598-2998 Impact factor: 4.679
Summary of previously reported patients with primary CNS histiocytic sarcoma
| Reference | Age/Gender | Site | Numbers | Size (cm)[ | Treatment | Clinical outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gill-Samra et al. [ | 38 yr/F | Posterior temporal lobe | Solitary | 5 | Surgery+WBRT+ Chemotherapy (temozolomide) | Died 3 weeks after the first cycle of temozolomide |
| Toshkezi et al. [ | 71 yr/F | Intramedullary lesion (Tll-12), leptomeninges | Solitary | 2.5 | Surgery+XRT | Died 5 months after diagnosis |
| Bell et al. [ | 62 yr/F | Posterior fossa | Solitary | ND | Surgery | Remains well 24 months after surgery |
| Bell et al. [ | 34 yr/M | Frontal lobe | Solitary | 2 | Surgery | Remains well 10 months after surgery |
| Devic et al. [ | 43 yr/F | Corpus callosum, Middle cerebellar peduncle, periventricular white matter, spinal cord | Multiple | ND | Chemotherapy (steroid, vinblastine, cladribine) | Died 10 months after diagnosis |
| Wang et al. [ | 55 yr/F | Periventricular white matter | Multiple | ND | Surgery+XRT+WBRT | Died 4 months after diagnosis |
| Torres et al. [ | 20 mo/M | Leptomeninges | Solitary | ND | Chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide, idarubicin, vincristine, dexamethasone, intrathecal MTX, and Ara-C) | 3 Months after onset of treatment |
| Cheuk et al. [ | 69 yr/F | Parietal lobe | Solitary | 1.5 | Surgery+WBRT+chemotherapy | Died 8 months after therapy |
| Cheuk et al. [ | 43 yr/M | Spinal cord | Solitary | 1.7 | Surgery+XRT+chemotherapy | Remains alive after 5 months |
| Cheuk et al. [ | 11 yr/M | Cerebellum, occipital cortex, frontal lobe | Multiple | 0.7-1 | Surgery | Died 4 months after surgery |
| Sun et al. [ | 13 yr/M | Occipital lobe and meninges | ND | ND | Surgery | 7 Months after onset of symptoms |
| Cao et al. [ | 53 yr/F | Cavernous sinus, relapsed to mediastinum | Solitary | 3.1 | Surgery+XRT | Died of metastasis after 3.5 years |
| Almefty et al. [ | 16 yr/M | Posterior parietal lobe | Solitary | 4.4 | Surgery+XRT | Died 4 months after presentation |
| Wu et al. [ | 50 yr/M | Parieto-occipital area | Solitary | 1.7 | Surgery+XRT | Remains well 7 months after surgery |
| Laviv et al. [ | 58 yr/M | Bifrontal lobe | Solitary | 6.5 | Surgery | Died 4 months after surgery[ |
| Gomi et al. [ | 17 mo/F | Cerebellum, Spinal dissemination (intradural lesion, below 10th thoracic vertebral level) | Solitary | 4.7 | Partial resection+chemotherapy (carboplatin, procarbazine, etoposide, cisplatin, vincristine, and cyclophosphamide) | Remains well 16 months after surgery with disease |
CNS, central nervous system; F, female; WBRT, whole brain radiotherapy; XRT, radiotherapy; ND, no data; M, male; MTX, methotrexate.
Longest dimension,
Died from ventricular tachycardia, not by cancer.
Fig. 1.Brain (A, B) and spinal (C, D) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the patient. (A) Brain FLAIR MRI showing high signal intensity in the left periventricular and deep white matter of the left parietal lobe. (B) T1-weighted axial enhancement of the brain, showing subtle enhancement of the lesion. (C) Sagittal T2-weighted spinal MRI, showing diffusely increased signal intensity lesion with mild cord enlargement in the lower level of C3 through the upper level of T5. (D) Sagittal T1-weighted MRI, showing patchy enhancement of the spinal cord.
Fig. 2.Cytologic and histologic features of the first cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) aspiration and biopsy of left parieto-occipital lesion. (A) Central nervous system smear, showing a few large cells with abundant cytoplasm and large nuclei (Giemsa staining, ×400). (B) The large cells in the solid sheet from the biopsy were similar to the cells in the CSF smear. Vessels are cuffed by mature lymphocytes (H&E staining, ×40). (C) A few bizarre cells, larger than the adjacent cells, were observed (H&E staining, ×200). (D) The cells, including the bizarre cells, were positive for CD68, consistent with histiocytes (×400).
Fig. 3.Histologic features of left parieto-occipital lesion from the second biopsy. (A) Large cells were arranged in a solid sheet, with a few intermixed larger bizarre cells, similar to findings in the first biopsy specimen. The nuclei of the background cells showed slight pleomorphism and coarse chromatin with no or small nucleoli. The cytoplasm was eosinophilic and cell membranes were not well-defined (H&E staining, ×400). (B-D) The cells were positive for CD68 (B) and CD163 (C), but negative for glial fibrillary acidic protein (D), consistent with histiocytic differentiation (×200).