Felipe Mussi von Ranke1, Igor Murad Faria1, Gláucia Zanetti2, Bruno Hochhegger3, Arthur Soares Souza4, Edson Marchiori2. 1. MD, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. 2. MD, PhD, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. 3. MD, PhD, Santa Casa de Porto Alegre, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil. 4. MD, PhD, Faculdade de Medicina de São José do Rio Preto (Famerp) and Ultra X, São José do Rio Preto, SP, Brazil.
Abstract
Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a genetically determined hamartomatous neurocutaneous disease with high phenotypic variability. TSC is characterized by widespread hamartomas and benign, or rarely malignant, neoplasms distributed in several organs throughout the body, especially in the brain, skin, retina, kidney, heart, and lung. Common manifestations include cortical tubers, subependymal nodules, white matter abnormalities, retinal abnormalities, cardiac rhabdomyoma, lymphangioleiomyomatosis, renal angiomyolipoma, and skin lesions. The wide range of organs affected by the disease implies that TSC1 and TSC2 genes play important roles in the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation. Although recent advances in treatment have improved morbidity, the prognosis remains quite poor and nearly 40% of patients die by the age of 35 years. Imaging is important in the evaluation of TSC because of its role not only in presumptive diagnosis, but also in defining the full extent of involvement. This information allows a better understanding of the behavioural phenotype, as related to lesion location. Imaging also contributes to treatment planning. This pictorial review describes common and uncommon imaging manifestations of TSC.
Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a genetically determined hamartomatous neurocutaneous disease with high phenotypic variability. TSC is characterized by widespread hamartomas and benign, or rarely malignant, neoplasms distributed in several organs throughout the body, especially in the brain, skin, retina, kidney, heart, and lung. Common manifestations include cortical tubers, subependymal nodules, white matter abnormalities, retinal abnormalities, cardiac rhabdomyoma, lymphangioleiomyomatosis, renal angiomyolipoma, and skin lesions. The wide range of organs affected by the disease implies that TSC1 and TSC2 genes play important roles in the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation. Although recent advances in treatment have improved morbidity, the prognosis remains quite poor and nearly 40% of patients die by the age of 35 years. Imaging is important in the evaluation of TSC because of its role not only in presumptive diagnosis, but also in defining the full extent of involvement. This information allows a better understanding of the behavioural phenotype, as related to lesion location. Imaging also contributes to treatment planning. This pictorial review describes common and uncommon imaging manifestations of TSC.
Entities:
Keywords:
Computed tomography; Magnetic resonance imaging; Tuberous sclerosis
Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a genetically determined multisystem
hamartomatous neurocutaneous disease. The organs most commonly involved are the
brain, skin, kidney, lung, retina, and heart(. The wide range of organs affected by the disease implies
that TSC1 and TSC2 genes play important roles in the regulation of cell
proliferation and differentiation(. The classic triad of manifestations consists of facial adenoma
sebaceum, epilepsy, and mental retardation(. The presence of common manifestations, including cortical
tubers or subependymal nodules, white matter (WM) abnormalities, retinal
abnormalities, cardiac rhabdomyoma, lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM), and renal
angiomyolipoma (AML), allows confirmation of the diagnosis, especially when
associated with skin lesions(.
Imaging is important in the evaluation of TSC because of its roles not only in
presumptive diagnosis, but in defining the full extent of involvement. Imaging also
contributes to treatment planning.
DIAGNOSIS
The demonstration of a pathogenic mutation in the TSC1 or TSC2 gene in normal tissue
is now considered sufficient for the diagnosis of TSC, independent of clinical
manifestations(. Clinical
diagnostic criteria are important, however, because genetic testing may not identify
a mutation in up to 25% of patients. The clinical criteria are divided into major
and minor features, with definitive diagnosis defined by the presence of at least
two major features or one major and two minor features. The diagnosis of TSC is
considered possible in the presence of one major or two or more minor
features(.
INTRACRANIAL MANIFESTATIONS
Cortical tubers
The expansive lesions of the central nervous system alone are not diagnostic of
TSC and may be seen in other pathological conditions(.Cortical tubers are benign hamartomas detectable in the cerebral cortex in
approximately 95% of patients with TSC(. They are considered to be related closely to the
neurological manifestations of TSC, including epilepsy, cognitive disability,
and neurobehavioural abnormalities(. On magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), cortical tubers
typically appear as well-circumscribed areas of low signal intensity on
T1-weighted and high signal intensity on T2-weighted sequences( (Figures 1 and 2).
Figure 1
An 8-year-old boy with tuberous sclerosis complex. Axial
fluid-attenuation inversion-recovery image demonstrates cortical
tubers (arrows) as well-circumscribed areas of high signal
intensity. Superficial white matter abnormalities are seen as
hyperintense areas in relation to tubers (arrowhead).
Figure 2
A 12-year-old boy with tuberous sclerosis complex. Axial T2-weighted
image shows cortical tubers as well-circumscribed areas of high
signal intensity (white arrows) and subependymal nodules along the
ventricular surface (black arrowheads). Note radial migration line
appearing as a thin, straight band of hyperintensity extending from
the juxtaventricular white matter to the cortex (black arrow), and
white matter cyst-like lesion located in deep white matter near the
atrium of the right lateral ventricle (white arrowhead).
An 8-year-old boy with tuberous sclerosis complex. Axial
fluid-attenuation inversion-recovery image demonstrates cortical
tubers (arrows) as well-circumscribed areas of high signal
intensity. Superficial white matter abnormalities are seen as
hyperintense areas in relation to tubers (arrowhead).A 12-year-old boy with tuberous sclerosis complex. Axial T2-weighted
image shows cortical tubers as well-circumscribed areas of high
signal intensity (white arrows) and subependymal nodules along the
ventricular surface (black arrowheads). Note radial migration line
appearing as a thin, straight band of hyperintensity extending from
the juxtaventricular white matter to the cortex (black arrow), and
white matter cyst-like lesion located in deep white matter near the
atrium of the right lateral ventricle (white arrowhead).
Subependymal nodules
Subependymal nodules are common brain lesions found in patients with TSC, which
represent hamartomatous growths. Typically benign, subependymal nodules can
degenerate into subependymal giant cell astrocytomas (SEGAs)(. Computed tomography (CT) is
useful for the detection of subependymal nodules, as they are associated with
calcification far more commonly (88%) than are cortical tubers(. On MRI, subependymal nodules
show intermediate signal intensity on T1-weighted images and isointense to
hyperintense signals on T2-weighted images( (Figure 2).
Subependymal giant cell astrocytomas
SEGAs are widely accepted to be derived from subependymal nodules(. The prognosis is generally
good, as SEGAs grow slowly. However, SEGA growth may result in ventricular
obstruction and hydrocephalus(. SEGAs are hypo- to isointense compared with cortex on
T1-weighted images and heterogeneously iso- to hyperintense on T2-weighted
images( (Figure 3).
Figure 3
A 23-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex and subependymal
giant cell astrocytomas. Axial fluid-attenuation inversion-recovery
image (A) shows heterogeneous hyperintense masses
(subependymal giant cell astrocytomas) located at the frontal horn
of the lateral ventricles, near the foramen of Monro (white arrows).
Axial contrast-enhanced T1-weighted image (B) shows
strong and heterogeneous enhancement of the lesions (white arrows).
Note also cortical tubers (black arrows), and subependymal nodule
along the right lateral ventricular surface (arrowheads), best
depicted on fluid-attenuation inversion-recovery image.
A 23-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex and subependymal
giant cell astrocytomas. Axial fluid-attenuation inversion-recovery
image (A) shows heterogeneous hyperintense masses
(subependymal giant cell astrocytomas) located at the frontal horn
of the lateral ventricles, near the foramen of Monro (white arrows).
Axial contrast-enhanced T1-weighted image (B) shows
strong and heterogeneous enhancement of the lesions (white arrows).
Note also cortical tubers (black arrows), and subependymal nodule
along the right lateral ventricular surface (arrowheads), best
depicted on fluid-attenuation inversion-recovery image.
White matter abnormalities
WM abnormalities in TSC include superficial abnormalities associated with
cortical tubers, radial migration lines (RMLs), and cyst-like WM lesions. On
MRI, superficial WM abnormalities are seen as hyperintense areas on T2-weighted
images and hypointense areas on T1-weighted images (Figure 1). RMLs appear as thin, straight or curvilinear
bands of hyperintensity on T2-weighted images and show iso- to hypointensity on
T1-weighted sequences. Cyst-like WM lesions are small well-demarcated lesions
with intensity similar to that of cerebrospinal fluid. They are seen in deep WM,
typically near the lateral ventricles(.
PULMONARY MANIFESTATIONS
Lymphangioleiomyomatosis
LAM is a rare disorder that often occurs in patients with TSC (TSC-LAM). A rare
sporadic form (S-LAM) affects the lungs, lymphatics, retroperitoneum, and
kidneys(. TSC-LAM and S-LAM affect
women almost exclusively and are characterized by diffuse interstitial
proliferation of smooth muscle cell bundles and cystic changes in the pulmonary
parenchyma. The hallmark feature of LAM is the presence of diffuse,
well-circumscribed, thin-walled lung cysts distributed uniformly throughout the
lungs( (Figure
4). Clinically, LAM is characterized by progressive dyspnoea on
exertion, recurrent pneumothoraces (Figure
5), and abdominal tumors, including AMLs and
lymphangiomyomas(. Pneumothorax and chylous
pleural effusion are the two major complications of pulmonary LAM(.
Figure 4
A 52-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex. Axial
(A,B) and coronal (C) CT
mini-maximum-intensity projection images show numerous bilateral,
variably sized thin-walled cysts, compatible with
lymphangioleiomyomatosis.
Figure 5
A 52-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex presenting with
sudden onset of right chest pain and dyspnoea. Axial CT image
obtained with the lung window setting shows right-sided pneumothorax
and numerous thin-walled cysts scattered throughout the lungs,
compatible with lymphangioleiomyomatosis.
A 52-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex. Axial
(A,B) and coronal (C) CT
mini-maximum-intensity projection images show numerous bilateral,
variably sized thin-walled cysts, compatible with
lymphangioleiomyomatosis.A 52-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex presenting with
sudden onset of right chest pain and dyspnoea. Axial CT image
obtained with the lung window setting shows right-sided pneumothorax
and numerous thin-walled cysts scattered throughout the lungs,
compatible with lymphangioleiomyomatosis.
Multifocal micronodular pneumocyte hyperplasia
Multifocal micronodular pneumocyte hyperplasia is the second lung manifestation
in TSC. It is a rare pulmonary disorder characterized by multicentric,
well-demarcated nodular proliferation of type II pneumocytes along alveolar
septa(. Multifocal
micronodular pneumocyte hyperplasia is characterized on high-resolution CT by
multiple non-calcified pulmonary nodules or nodular ground-glass opacities
ranging in size from 2 mm to 1 cm, scattered diffusely and randomly throughout
the lung(.
CARDIAC MANIFESTATIONS
Cardiac rhabdomyoma is a benign striated muscle tumor and the most common cardiac
tumor in children(. It
occurs in about 60% of children, but only 20% of adults, with TSC(. Most rhabdomyomas are asymptomatic, with a
minority of patients experiencing arrhythmia and/or cardiac failure(. Echocardiography has been established as the primary
diagnostic tool for the evaluation of cardiac rhabdomyomas in children(. CT or MRI can provide additional information regarding tumour
extension or size, especially in older patients or those from whom echocardiographic
images are poor due to bone or lung interference(.
RENAL MANIFESTATIONS
Renal angiomyolipoma
AMLs are the most common mesenchymal renal neoplasms. They occur as isolated,
sporadic entities in 80% of cases, most commonly manifesting in middle-aged
women(. The other
20% of AMLs develop in association with TSC. AMLs are found in70-80% of patients
with TSC(. The most alarming
complication of renal AMLs is rupture, due to their abnormal vasculature,
associated frequently with aneurysms( (Figure 6). CT permits the diagnosis of renal AML by
demonstrating the presence of intratumoral fat (Figure 7). Attenuation < -20 HU is a characteristic finding of
AML in unenhanced CT examination(. AMLs with a
predominant fatty component are isointense relative to fat on all MRI
sequences(; their
signal intensity is typically higher than that of the renal parenchyma on
T1-weighted images, and homogeneous and high on T2-weighted images( (Figure 8).
Figure 6
A 38-year-old man with tuberous sclerosis complex and renal
lipid-poor angiomyolipoma. Axial contrast-enhanced CT image shows a
large, high-attenuation, enhancing heterogeneous tumour with an
aneurysm in the right kidney (arrow). This patient also had a small
lipid-poor angiomyolipoma in the left kidney (arrowhead).
Figure 7
A 31-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex and renal
angiomyolipomas. Axial unenhanced CT image demonstrates multiple
fat-containing tumors in the kidneys.
Figure 8
A 21-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex and multiple
renal angiomyolipomas. T1-weighted in-phase gradient-recalled echo
image (A) shows a hyperintense right renal mass
(arrow). T1-weighted opposed-phase gradient-recalled echo image
(B) shows a peripheral India ink artefact at the
fat-water interface between the mass and surrounding normal renal
parenchyma, a finding diagnostic of lipid-rich angiomyolipoma.
T1-weighted fat-suppressed image (C) shows diffuse
intralesional low signal intensity in the lipid-rich angiomyolipoma.
Note also a lipid-poor angiomyolipoma in the right kidney, appearing
as a hyperintense nodular lesion in (A) (arrowhead) and
presenting homogeneous internal signal loss in (B)
(arrowhead) due to the presence of microscopic amounts of fat within
the lesion.
A 38-year-old man with tuberous sclerosis complex and renal
lipid-poor angiomyolipoma. Axial contrast-enhanced CT image shows a
large, high-attenuation, enhancing heterogeneous tumour with an
aneurysm in the right kidney (arrow). This patient also had a small
lipid-poor angiomyolipoma in the left kidney (arrowhead).A 31-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex and renal
angiomyolipomas. Axial unenhanced CT image demonstrates multiple
fat-containing tumors in the kidneys.A 21-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex and multiple
renal angiomyolipomas. T1-weighted in-phase gradient-recalled echo
image (A) shows a hyperintense right renal mass
(arrow). T1-weighted opposed-phase gradient-recalled echo image
(B) shows a peripheral India ink artefact at the
fat-water interface between the mass and surrounding normal renal
parenchyma, a finding diagnostic of lipid-rich angiomyolipoma.
T1-weighted fat-suppressed image (C) shows diffuse
intralesional low signal intensity in the lipid-rich angiomyolipoma.
Note also a lipid-poor angiomyolipoma in the right kidney, appearing
as a hyperintense nodular lesion in (A) (arrowhead) and
presenting homogeneous internal signal loss in (B)
(arrowhead) due to the presence of microscopic amounts of fat within
the lesion.
Renal cell carcinoma
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is a rare manifestation in patients with TSC, with an
estimated incidence of 2-4%, which is nonetheless higher than in the general
population(. Imaging
findings depend on RCC subtype. Clear cell RCC, the most common subtype, shows
hypo- to isointensity on T1-weighted images and iso- to hyperintensity on
T2-weighted images(. Papillary RCC commonly
demonstrates low signal intensity on T2-weighted images and tends to exhibit
hypovascular and homogeneous enhancement, which can be difficult to
differentiate from that of lipid-poor AMLs(.
OTHER MANIFESTATIONS
Detection of characteristic dermatological lesions, which can appear anytime during
childhood, is important in the diagnosis of TSC. The most common lesions are
hypomelanotic macules, angiofibromas, shagreen patches (Figure 9), forehead plaques, and ungual fibromas(.
Figure 9
A 13-year-old boy with tuberous sclerosis complex. Sagittal
(A) and coronal (B) T1-weighted images
with gadolinium enhancement show a large, protuberant, irregularly
thickened, elevated skin patch with an irregular border in the dorsal
cervical region, consistent with shagreen patch (arrowheads). Note also
in (A) enhancing subependymal nodules (arrows) projecting
into the lumen of the lateral ventricle in the region of the foramen of
Monro.
A 13-year-old boy with tuberous sclerosis complex. Sagittal
(A) and coronal (B) T1-weighted images
with gadolinium enhancement show a large, protuberant, irregularly
thickened, elevated skin patch with an irregular border in the dorsal
cervical region, consistent with shagreen patch (arrowheads). Note also
in (A) enhancing subependymal nodules (arrows) projecting
into the lumen of the lateral ventricle in the region of the foramen of
Monro.The involvement of various abdominal organs, including the alimentary tract,
hepatobiliary system, and pancreas, has been reported in patients with TSC.
Hepatobiliary lesions, including hepatomegaly, AMLs, lipomas, hamartomas, and
fibromas, have been described in patients with TSC. Most hepatic AMLs are
sporadic(. The incidence
of hepatic AML (Figure 10) is much lower than
that of renal AML in patients with TSC(. Skeletal abnormalities in TSC include cyst-like lesions,
hyperostosis of the inner table of the calvaria, osteosclerotic changes (Figure 11), periosteal new bone formation,
cystic changes in the phalanges, and scoliosis(. These bone abnormalities can also be seen in several other
diaseases(, and only in the presence of
changes in other organs that fulfill TSC criteria can be associated with the
complex. Retinal hamartomas are present in about 40-50% of patients with TSC. When
retinal hamartomas have calcification, ultrasound, CT, and MRI can show these
lesions(.
Figure 10
A 27-year-old man with tuberous sclerosis complex. Axial unenhanced CT
image shows two well-defined nodular lesions with fat attenuation
(arrows) in the liver, compatible with angiomyolipomas.
Figure 11
A 22-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex and sclerotic spinal
bone lesions. Axial CT images at the T5 (A) and T8
(B) levels demonstrate round, oval, and elongated
sclerotic bone lesions on the anterior aspects of the vertebral bodies,
pedicles, laminas, and transverse and spinous processes.
A 27-year-old man with tuberous sclerosis complex. Axial unenhanced CT
image shows two well-defined nodular lesions with fat attenuation
(arrows) in the liver, compatible with angiomyolipomas.A 22-year-old woman with tuberous sclerosis complex and sclerotic spinal
bone lesions. Axial CT images at the T5 (A) and T8
(B) levels demonstrate round, oval, and elongated
sclerotic bone lesions on the anterior aspects of the vertebral bodies,
pedicles, laminas, and transverse and spinous processes.
Authors: D N Franz; A Brody; C Meyer; J Leonard; G Chuck; S Dabora; G Sethuraman; T V Colby; D J Kwiatkowski; F X McCormack Journal: Am J Respir Crit Care Med Date: 2001-08-15 Impact factor: 21.405
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