| Literature DB >> 27867924 |
Myung Sung Joo1, Young Joon Rho1, Sang Woo Song1, Young-Cho Koh1, Hong Gee Roh2, So-Dug Lim3.
Abstract
Intracranial hemangiopericytoma (HPC) is a rare brain tumor with aggressive biologic behavior associated with high recurrence rate and often with extracranial metastasis. The most common sites of extracranial metastasis of the intracranial HPC are the long bones, lung, liver and abdominal cavity in the order of frequencies. Extracranial metastases usually occur long after the initial diagnosis of the primary tumor. Metastatic intracranial HPC to the vertebra has been rarely reported. We present a case of intracranial HPC metastasized to the L2 vertebral body 13 years after multiple surgical resections and radiotherapy of the primary intracranial HPC.Entities:
Keywords: Hemangiopericytoma; Lumbar vertebrae; Metastasis; Surgery
Year: 2016 PMID: 27867924 PMCID: PMC5114184 DOI: 10.14791/btrt.2016.4.2.128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Tumor Res Treat ISSN: 2288-2405
Fig. 1Postcontrast axial T1-weighted magnetic resonance findings of intracranial HPC at preoperation and postoperation. A: Preoperative axial T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging with gadolinium administration showing an intracranial HPC at the right temporo-occipital region. B: Postoperative axial T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging with gadolinium administration showing gross total removal of the residual-recurrent intracranial HPC. HPC, hemangiopericytoma.
Fig. 2Computed tomogram of the spine at the level of L2 reveals invasion of the tumor to vertebral body and anterior epidural space (A and B). T1-weighted image enhanced with gadolinium revealing an isointense lesion in posterior aspect of L2 vertebral body with retropulsion to anterior epidural space (C and D).
Fig. 3Postoperative lateral & anteroposterior X-ray (A and B) and saggital & axial MRI (C and D). Grossly total removal of tumor at L2 vertebral body and replacement of bone graft. Transpedicular screw fixation from T12 to L4.
Fig. 4Tumor histopathology. Right temporooccipital region of intracranial HPC (A and C) and metastatic spinal HPC (B and D) in 13 years later. Photomicrograph demonstrating a hemangiopericytoma with a highly cellular and vascular tumor consisting of compact neoplastic cells (A and B; H&E staining). Ki-67 proliferation index is more increased by about 10% in the metastatic spinal HPC as compared with intracranial HPC (C and D; Ki-67 immunohistochemistry). HPC, hemangiopericytoma.
Summary of reported cases of metastatic intracranial HPC to spine
| Study | Age | Sex | Duration (years) | Metastasis site | Extent of resection | RTx | F/U (months) | Outcome | Local recurrence | Other metastasis site |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kruse [ | 22 | F | 8 | Lumbar | Surgery (detail NA) | No | 60 | Death | No | Femur |
| Scott et al. [ | 38 | M | 16 | T12/L1 | Surgery (detail NA) | Yes | 36 | PD | Yes | Temporal bone |
| 19 | Upper cervical | Surgery (detail NA) | No | 36 | Death | |||||
| Nonaka et al. [ | 40 | F | 9.5 | T8 | Partial | Yes | 24 | PD | Yes | Lung/femur |
| Woitzik et al. [ | 40 | F | 8 | C6-T2 | Complete | Yes | 12 | PD | No | Liver/femur |
| 9 | L2 | - | Yes | NA | NA | |||||
| Lee et al. [ | 48 | F | 6.5 | C6-7 | Partial | Yes | 7 | PD | No | No |
| Taniura et al. [ | 30 | F | 4 | L4-S1 | Partial | Yes | 12 | PD | No | No |
| Cole and Schmidt [ | 36 | F | 17 | C3 | Complete | Yes | 48 | PD | Yes | Liver |
| Fukuda et al. [ | 36 | M | 17 | T10 | Complete | No | 36 | NED | No | No |
| Our case | 45 | M | 13 | L2 | Complete | No | 6 | NED | No | No |
NA, not available; PD, progression of disease; NED, no evidence of disease; F/U, follow up