| Literature DB >> 28744773 |
Aditaya Kumar1,2, B Alrohmain3, W Taylor3, P Bhattathiri3.
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to serve as a reference to aid in the management of this poorly understood intracranial malignancy. The authors report their experience treating the eighth ostensible case of a primary intracranial alveolar soft part sarcoma (ASPS). A 21-year-old man presented to hospital after collapsing. He gave a 1-year history of headache, a 2-month history of reduced visual acuity and on examination had left facial paraesthesia with left-sided incoordination. MRI of the brain revealed a large left posterior fossa mass. The patient underwent resection of the tumour with good recovery in function. Immunohistochemical analysis of the tumour specimen confirmed an ASPS, and multimodal imaging in search of an extra-cranial disease primary was negative. A review of the literature yielded only seven other cases of primary intracranial ASPS. A variety of diagnostic imaging modalities were employed in search of a disease primary, as were various combinations of surgical resection, chemotherapy and radiotherapy as treatment. Half of the cases documented delayed disease recurrence. The authors discuss the following: the unique radiological and immunohistological characteristics of this disease including the potential for its misdiagnosis; the investigations required to diagnose a primary intracranial ASPS; the efficacy of current medical and surgical treatment options and the factors that will aid in prognostication. This is the first review of this new primary intracranial malignancy. From our analysis, we offer a joint radiological and immunohistochemical algorithm for the diagnosis of primary intracranial ASPS and specific operative considerations prior to resection.Entities:
Keywords: Alveolar soft part sarcoma; Intracranial; Primary; Tumour
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28744773 PMCID: PMC6394700 DOI: 10.1007/s10143-017-0874-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosurg Rev ISSN: 0344-5607 Impact factor: 3.042
Fig. 1Pre-operative axial T2 pre-contrast (left) and T1 post-contrast (right) showing a large broad-based extra-axial mass measuring 4 × 4 × 5 cm in the left posterior fossa effacing and displacing the fourth ventricle
Fig. 2Post-operative axial T2 (left) and T1 MRI (right) brain post-contrast at 9 months post-resection. Evidence of associated gliosis with some haemosiderin deposit in the left cerebellar hemisphere. No pathological enhancement is seen in the area of the resection cavity to indicate tumour recurrence
Cases of reported primary intracranial ASPS to date
| Case | Authors | Age, gender | Presentation | Location | Investigations to find primary | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bodi et al. | 39, M | Seizures | Left temporal meningeal | CT chest/abdo/pelvis | Total surgical resection | Alive at 10 months |
| 2 | Das et al. | 17, F | Frontal mass | Bifrontal | Abdo USS, CXR, bone scan | Total surgical resection, adjuvant chemotherapy | Alive at 4 months |
| 3 | Ahn et al. | 9, F | Headache, seizure, tinnitus | Right cerebellopontine angle | Whole body PET, CT chest/abdo/pelvis, bone marrow biopsy | Subtotal surgical resection, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, ×2 radiosurgery for recurrence | New lesion at 14 months, local recurrence at 29 months |
| 4 | Emmez et al. | 11, F | Headache, seizure, paraesthesia | Left frontal | CT chest/abdo/pelvis, CT sinuses, bone marrow biopsy, whole-body PET | Total surgical resection, whole brain radiotherapy, adjuvant chemotherapy, reoperation, 2nd course chemotherapy | Local recurrence at 45 months |
| 5 | Mandal et al. | 32, F | Headache, vomiting, diplopia | Right parietal meningeal | Unknown | Total surgical resection | Unknown |
| 6 | Tao et al. | 28, F | Forehead mass | Left frontal | CT chest, USS abdomen, whole-body PET | Total surgical resection, adjuvant radiotherapy | Alive at 27 months |
| 7 | Tao et al. | 13, M | Tinnitus, proptosis | Right temporal | CT chest, USS abdomen | Subtotal surgical resection, adjuvant radiotherapy | Local recurrence, died at 24 months |
| 8 | Current case | 21, M | Headache, ataxia, cranial nerve palsies | Left posterior fossa/anterior brainstem | CT chest, USS thorax, ×2 whole-body PET | Total surgical resection | Alive at 8 months |
CT computerized tomography, CTX chemotherapy, CXR chest X-ray, PET positron emission tomography, RTX radiotherapy, STR subtotal surgical resection, TSR total surgical resection, USS ultrasound scan
Fig. 3Left—Cells arranged in alveolar pattern with abundant granular cytoplasm (hematoxylin and eosin, ×100). Right—Positive nuclear uptake for TFE3 gene (TFE3, ×100)