| Literature DB >> 28629398 |
Ema Kantorová1, Michal Bittšanský2, Štefan Sivák3, Eva Baranovičová2, Petra Hnilicová2, Vladimír Nosáľ3, Daniel Čierny2, Kamil Zeleňák4, Wolfgang Brück5, Egon Kurča3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Co-occurrence of multiple sclerosis (MS) and glial tumours (GT) is uncommon although occasionally reported in medical literature. Interpreting the overlapping radiologic and clinical characteristics of glial tumours, MS lesions, and progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) can be a significant diagnostic challenge. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Anaplastic astrocytoma; Immune reconstitution syndrome; Multiple sclerosis; Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy; Tumefactive lesion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28629398 PMCID: PMC5477142 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-017-3415-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1a FLAIR, Fluid-Attenuated Inversion Recovery, sagittal (2006): Periventricular high–signal intensity lesions exhibiting distribution of ovoid demyelinated periventricular lesions radially oriented to ventricles, which is typical for multiple sclerosis. b FLAIR, Fluid-Attenuated Inversion Recovery, transverse (2006): Atypical tumefactive periventricular demyelinated lesion connected to the frontal pole of the lateral ventricle. c T2w, T2-weighted MRI, transeverse (2006): Atypical hyperintensive tumefactive periventricular demyelinated lesion connected to the frontal pole of the lateral ventricle
Fig. 2a Dual Fast SE, Dual Fast Spin-Echo, transverse (2011): Enlargement of the atypical hyperintensive tumefactive demyelinated lesion in the right frontal lobe. b FLAIR, Fluid -Attenuated Inversion Recovery, transverse (2011): Enlargement of the atypical tumefactive demyelinated lesion in the right frontal lobe
Fig. 3a FLAIR, Fluid-Attenuated Inversion Recovery, transverse (2013): Progression of the non-homogeneously hyper-intensive demyelinated lesion of the right frontal lobe, involving U-fibers. The lesion is well-defined to cortex, confluent with white mater, and irregular in shape. b T1w, T1-weighted MRI, transverse (2013): Hypointense irregular lesion at the rim of the right corner of the lateral ventricle in the right frontal lobe and several slightly hypointensive areas subcortically with no post-Gad enhancement. c T2w, T2-weighted MRI, transverse (2013): Irregular signal intensity within the lesion in the right frontal lobe. d DWI, Diffusion Weighted Imaging (2013): High signal intensity in the right frontal cortico-subcortical region and slightly increased signal in periventricular regions of both hemispheres
Fig. 4a FLAIR, Fluid-Attenuated Inversion Recovery, sagittal (2014): Large non-homogenous hyperintense lesion of the right frontal lobe involving demyelination and oedema with mild mass-effect. It is relatively sharply defined to grey matter and confluent with white matter. Glial tumour is undetectable. b FLAIR, Fluid -Attenuated Inversion Recovery, transverse (2014): Diffuse hyperintense lesion of the right frontal lobe - demyelination. It has mild mass-effect. It is well-defined to cortex and to white matter and irregular in shape. c 3D DIR, 3D Double Inversion Recovery, sagittal (2014): Multifocal cortical involvement in the right frontal cortex adjacent to demyelinated lesions, diffuse confluent hyperintensive lesion in cortico-subcortical fronto-polar region
Fig. 51HMRS, 1H–magnetic resonance spectroscopy (2015): 1H–MRS of the right and left frontal lobes - Creatine to Cholin maps, the decreased ratio may indicate tumorous tissue (red-contoured squares)
Fig. 6Histopathology findings. (HE, LFB-PAS, Bielschowsky, CD3, SV40, Olig2, GFAP, Vimentin, Nogo-A, Ki67, IDH1, p53): a The hematoxylin-eosin (HE) staining revealed grey and white matter with a markedly increased cellularity. Cells appeared pleomorphic and demonstrated a diffuse invasion into the CNS tissue. The tumour cells were embedded into a glial matrix. The nuclei showed a pronounced variation with respect to size and shape and depicted an increased nucleolar prominence. Mitosis was detectable. Signs of necrosis or microvascular proliferation were absent. b The immunohistochemical staining for Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein (GFAP). Vimentin marked the majority of the tumour cells. c Some of the tumour cells were positive for Olig2. The tumour cells were not positive for NogoA. The proliferation ranged between 2 and 3% as determined by Ki67 immunohistochemistry. d The tumour cells were positive for isocitrate dehydrogenase1 (IDH1) and p53. e, f T-lymphocytes were not increased in the CD3 immunohistochemistry No SV40 positive cells were detected
Fig. 711-MET PET, 11Methyl-Methionine Positron Emission Tomography (2015): Increased uptake of 11C–methionine in anaplastic astrocytoma in the right frontal cortico-subcortical region, showing high proliferation index of the tumour. Lower uptake was also detected in left frontal and occcipital cortical areas
Differential diagnoses of tumefactive demyelinated lesions, malignant glial tumours, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy and progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy associated with immune reconstitution syndrome
| TDL | malignant GT | PML | PML-IRIS | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical sy | motor, cognitive (aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, Gerstman, coma) sensitive, cerebellar, brain stem. Visual field defects, Epileptic seizures | epileptic seizures, cognitive and memory deficit, motor, sensitive. | altered mental status (aphasia), motor, limb and gait ataxia, visual symptoms: homonymous hemianopia, cortical blindness, diplopia. Epileptic seizures. No optic nerve and spinal cord involvement. | altered mental status (aphasia), motor, limb and gait ataxia, visual symptoms: hemianopia, cortical blindness, diplopia. Epileptic seizures. No optic nerve and spinal cord involvement | [ |
|
MRI T2w/
|
Unilateral or bilateral. Frontal, parietal. Periventricular, juxta cortical. 2 cm, large lesion with little mass effect and edema
Variable rate of hyper-intensity.
Central dilated vessel.
|
Unilateral. Supra-tentorial.
|
Bilateral. Supra-Intra-tentorial. Cortex, deep gray matter. (Frontal, parietal, occipital. Subcortical location, U-fibers, cortex, basal ganglia). 3 cm.
| Bilateral, spreading. Cortex and subcortical WM. Edema | [ |
| MRI T1w |
Hypo-intense.
| Hypo-intense. CT-hypo-intensity |
Hypo-intense.
| Hypo-intense with hyper- intense rim | [ |
| MRI Gd + | incomplete rim enhancement | complete rim enhancement | negative or variable, punctuate and rim like | positive or variable, punctate and rim like | [ |
| MRI - PWI, DWI | decreased PWI in lesions, increased DWI in active demyelination | increased PWI, increased DWI in central necrosis | DWI always hyper-intense, with peripheral rim. | +/− restricted DWI | [ |
| 1H- MRS |
increased Cho, lipids, lactate, mildly decreased NAA and NAA/Cr (differ from malignant GT)
| increased Cho and Cho/Cr, lipids, lactate, decreased NAA, lack of β,γ-Glx elevation | A decrease of NAA/Cr ratio, NAA and Cr. An increase of Lac/Cr, Cho/Cr, Cho, lipids/Cr, mIns, Lac, Lip. |
increased Cho, decreased NAA, the presence of Lac/lipids at 1.3 ppm, and the presence of mIns, Higher Cho/Cr, mIns/Cr, Lip1/Cr, and Lip2/Cr in PML-IRIS than PML .
| [ |
| CSF native |
normal or mild increased proteinorhachia and white blood count.
| GFAP+ cells | mildly increased cellularity, normal proteinorhachia | mild to moderate increase of lymphocytes and protein levels | [ |
| CSF JCV DNA | negative, infrequently low positivity (less than 25) | negative? unknown | JCV-specific IgG, DNA copies, infrequently negative | JCV-specific IgG, DNA copies. Sometimes negative | [ |
| Response to corticoids | very good | only partial | none | good | [ |
| Histology | Hyper-cellularity, myelin protein-laden macrophages, variable lymphocytic inflammation, reactive gliosis and relative axonal preservation. | moderate cellularity, bizarre cells with hyperchromatic nuclei, moderate pleomorphic, gemistocytes, perivascular lymphocytes, rare areas of necrosis, neo-vascularization | swelling of oligodendrocyte and multi-lobular astrocytes, basophilic nuclei, eosinophilic inclusion bodies, |
Hyper-cellularity, CD8+ positive T cells dominate - their number the same as in active MS lesions, fewer CD4+ and CD20+ T cells in perivascular cuffs.
| [ |
| Outcome | as typical MS | progressive worsening | progressive worsening | worsening, regression possible | [ |
| Immunological markers in peripheral blood | upregulation of transcription factors of Th1 (pSTAT1 and T-bet) and Th17 (pSTAT3) in circulating CD4+, CD8 + T-cells and monocytes. CD4+ T-cells with a proinflammatory Th1 and Th17 phenotype, |
lower T-bet, pSTAT1, and pSTAT3 in CD4+, CD8 + T-cells, and monocytes. Lower CD4 Th1 and Th17. Increased IL-10, TGF-β, PGE2, down modulation of co-stimulation molecules by APCs. Tumor angiogenesis, expression of CD34+ progenitor cells.
| variable data: stable CD4+ and CD8+, non-significant decrease or increased T cells but unchanged CD4/CD8 ratio. Decrease expression of CD49d, CD29 (VLA-4), CD11a, CD62L, CXCR3 on T cells. Decreased expression of VLA4 on myeloid dendritic cells, decreased count of dendritic cells. Production of CD34+ cells, increase of memory B cells. Increased IL-10. | Increased IFN-γ, IL-12p70, IL-4, IL-10, IL-5, IL-13. | [ |
TDL tumefactive demyelinating lesion, GT glial tumour, PML progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, PML-IRIS PML -immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome, MRI T2w T2 weighted imagines of magnetic resonance imagine, MRI T1w T1 weighted imagines, DWI diffusion weighted imagines, PWI perfusion weighted imagines, GAD gadolinium enhancement, WM white matter, GM gray matter, CT computer tomography, 1H–MRS proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, Cho cholin, NAA N-acetyl aspartate, Cr creatine, Lac lactate, mIns myoinositol, βγGlx βγ glutamate + glutamin, Lip lipids, NK natural killers, VLA4 alfa integrin 4, IL 4,10,12,13 interleukin 4,10,12,13, CD4 T helper lymphocytes, CD8 T suppressor lymphocytes, CD11 alfa component of various integrins, CD20 B-lymphocyte antigen, CD28 proteins expressed on T cells that provide co-stimulatory signals required for T cell activation and survival, CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cell antigen, CD49 an integrin alpha subunit, CD62 a cell adhesion molecule found on lymphocytes, CD25+ FoxP3+ regulatory T cells, IgG imunoglobulin G, CXCR3 a chemokine receptor that is highly expressed on effector T cells and plays an important role in T cell trafficking and function, JCV John Cunningham virus, TGF-β transforming growth factor β,PGE2 = prostaglandin E2, GFAP glial fibrillar acidic protein, STAT 1,3 Signal transducer and activator of transcription 1,3, Th1 T1 lymphocytes, Th17 T17 lymphocytes, T-bet transcription factor, APC antigen presenting cells, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, DNA deoxyribonucleic acid
| 1999 | A 12-year-old girl with negative medical history presents with vestibular syndrome lasting three weeks |
| 1999–2006 | After having experienced several relapses with various symptoms (paresthesias of her left and right upper limbs, paresthesias of her distal limbs, weakness of upper limbs), she fulfilled McDonald criteria for definite relapsing-remitting MS due to demyelinating lesions in MRI (Fig. |
| 2006 October | Several rounds of intravenous boluses of methylprednisolon were effective and the patient improved. When she started treatment by interferon beta Ia (Rebif® Merck-Serono), her Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) was 2.0. |
| 2008–2009 | The treatment was interrupted due to her pregnancy in February 2008. In January 2009 she gave birth. During the early postpartum period the patient’s neurological status was unstable. |
| 2009 January to April | The patient suffered three relapses (sensitive symptoms, left-sided hemiparesis, paraparesis of distal limbs) and her EDSS increased to 4.0 although she obtained several rounds of intravenous methylprednisolon. |
| 2009 May | She resumed interferon beta Ia (Rebif® Merck-Serono) and reached remission. |
| 2011 March to May | Her disease progressed again, her EDSS increased to 4.5 and follow-up MRI reflected clinical activity (Fig. |
| 2012 August | To stop the disease progression, she was indicated to natalizumab (Tysabri® Biogen Idec), receiving 12 infusions (august 2012 - september 2013). |
| 2013 September | The follow-up brain 3.0 Tesla MRI showed enlargement of the lesion in the right frontal lobe, evaluated by radiologists as PML (Fig. |
| 2013 December | Not meeting Slovak indication criteria, the patient ceased taking natalizumab. The patient started treatment with fingolimod (Gilenya® Novartis Pharmaceuticals UK). At that time she was quadruparetic, more prominent on the left side. She needed assistance due to wide-based gait and she had intermittent headaches (mild to moderate congestive-dull or pulsating headache located in bi-temporal areas, partially alleviated by analgesics) EDSS was 5.0. |
| 2014 February | A follow-up 3.0 Tesla MRI of the brain showed enlargement of the prior frontal lobe lesion (Fig. |
| 2014 December | Over the following several months she developed new clinical symptoms: headache, sporadic epileptic seizures, disorientation. Immunomodulatory treatment was stopped. Repeated MRI was comparable with the MRI from February 2014, the atypical lesion in the right frontal lobe was in mild progression. |
| 2015 May |
1H-magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS) detected decreased creatin to cholin ratio in several small areas of the frontal lobe, possibly suggesting tumorous mass (Fig. |
| 2015 June | The patient needed anti-oedematous (dexamethason or methylprednisolon, boluses of manitol) and anti-epileptic therapy (valproic acid and levetiracetam) due to repeated secondary generalized epileptic seizures and intracranial hypertension syndrome. |
| 2015 August | Before starting oncological treatment, 11methyl-methionine positron emission tomography (11C MET PET) showed cortical localization of the brain tumor (Fig. |