| Literature DB >> 29040640 |
Aliya Al-Hajri1, Salim Al-Mughairi1, Alyma Somani1, Shu An1, Joan Liu1, Anna Miserocchi1, Andrew W McEvoy1, Tarek Yousry1, Chandrashekar Hoskote1, Maria Thom1.
Abstract
It is recognized that IDH mutation negative, low-grade epilepsy associated tumors (LEAT) can show diffuse growth patterns and lack the diagnostic hallmarks of either classical dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors (DNT) or typical ganglioglioma. "Nonspecific or diffuse DNT" and more recently "polymorphous low-grade neuroepithelial tumor of the young" have been terms used for these entities. There are few reports on the MRI recognition of these diffuse glioneuronal tumors (dGNT), which is important in planning the extent of surgical resection. In 27 LEATs T1, T2, FLAIR, and postcontrast T1 MRI were evaluated and the pathology reviewed, including immunostaining for NeuN, CD34, MAP2, and IDH1. Each case was then independently classified by pathology or MRI as simple DNT, complex DNT, or dGNT. There was agreement in 23/27 (85%; Kappa score 0.62; p < 0.01). In 4 cases, there was discrepancy in the diagnosis of simple versus complex DNT but 100% agreement achieved for dGNT. DNT showed significantly more expansion of the cortex, cystic change and ventricle extension than dGNT. dGNT showed significantly more subcortical T2w hyperintensity and focal cortical atrophy which correlated on pathology with CD34 expression, cortical neuronal loss and white matter rarefaction. There was no distinct cortical dysplasia component identified by MRI or pathology in any case. This study highlights that dGNT can be reliably discriminated on MRI from DNT.Entities:
Keywords: Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors (DNT); Long-term epilepsy associated tumors; MRI
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29040640 PMCID: PMC5939705 DOI: 10.1093/jnen/nlx090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuropathol Exp Neurol ISSN: 0022-3069 Impact factor: 3.685
Cases Included in the Study, Clinical Data and Localization of the Lesions, Type of Surgical Resection and Regions of Tumor Involvement on Pathological Examination
| Case for Table | Age at Time of Surgery (Years) | Gender | Main Location of Lesion on MRI | MRI Diagnosis | Tissues Resected as Samples for Histology | Anatomical Regions of Samples with Tumor | Pathology Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 39 | F | L Amyg | COMPLEX DNT | AMYG, Le, TL, HB, PHG, PES, CUSA | Amyg, small focus In TL | COMPLEX DNT |
| 2 | 26 | F | R parietal | SIMPLE DNT | Fragments of Le | All tissue samples | COMPLEX DNT |
| 3 | 22 | F | L superior frontal gyrus | COMPLEX DNT | Fragments of Le | All tissue samples | COMPLEX DNT |
| 4 | 20 | F | R Amyg, HB | COMPLEX DNT | TL, Le, HB, PES, CUSA | ITG, Le, PES | COMPLEX DNT |
| 5 | 35 | M | R PHG, FG, ITG | COMPLEX DNT | COMPLEX DNT | ||
| 6 | 61 | M | L medial temporal lesion | COMPLEX DNT | TL HB, PHG, PES, CUSA | ITG, HB, PES | COMPLEX DNT |
| 7 | 42 | F | R parietal lobe | COMPLEX DNT | Le, CUSA | In samples of Le | COMPLEX DNT |
| 8 | 28 | M | R medial temporal lesion | SIMPLE DNT | TL and Le | COMPLEX DNT | |
| 9 | 43 | F | R MTG | dGNT | Le and CUSA | In samples of Le | dGNT |
| 10 | 17 | F | R FG | dGNT | TL, HB, PES, CUSA ( | TL only | dGNT |
| 11 | 31 | M | L ITG, FG | dGNT | LE, CUSA | In samples of Le | dGNT |
| 12 | 48 | F | L mesial temporal lesion | dGNT | TL, HB, Le, PHG, CUSA | TL, ITG, HB, Le, PHG | dGNT |
| 13 | 31 | F | R occipital lobe | dGNT | Le | In samples of Le | dGNT |
| 14 | 16 | M | L STG | dGNT | Le and CUSA | In samples of Le | dGNT |
| 15 | 26 | F | R PHG | dGNT | TL, HB | ITG, PHG, HB | |
| 16 | 31 | M | L PHG | dGNT | TL, HB, PES, Le, CUSA ( | TL, HB, Le | |
| 17 | 26 | F | L PHG | dGNT | TL, HB, PHG, PES, CUSA | TL (ITG) HB, PHG, CUSA (NOT PES) | |
| 18 | 35 | M | R STG | dGNT | TL, HB, PHG, PES, Le, CUSA | TL and Le | |
| 19 | 18 | M | L Amyg | dGNT | TL, HB, PHG, PES, Le, CUSA | PHG, FG, Le, Temporal pole, HB, PES | |
| 20 | 24 | M | L MTG | dGNT | Le and CUSA | All tissue samples | |
| 21 | 40 | M | L PHG | dGNT | TL, HB, PES, Le, CUSA ( | PHG, HIPPO, TL | |
| 22 | 41 | M | R MTG | COMPLEX DNT | Le, TL, HB, PHG, PES, CUSA | Le and CUSA | SIMPLE DNT |
| 23 | 52 | F | L frontal rectus gyrus | SIMPLE DNT | Le | In all samples of Le | SIMPLE DNT |
| 24 | 60 | F | R PHG | SIMPLE DNT | TL, HB, PHG, PES, AMYG, CUSA | PHG | SIMPLE DNT |
| 25 | 31 | M | L supramarginal gyrus | COMPLEX DNT | Fragments of Le | In all samples of Le | SIMPLE DNT |
| 26 | 26 | F | R MTG | SIMPLE DNT | Fragments of Le | In all samples of Le | SIMPLE DNT |
| 27 | 27 | M | L STG | SIMPLE DNT | Fragments of Le | In all samples of Le | SIMPLE DNT |
The confirmed MRI and pathology diagnosis following review are highlighted in 2 columns. dGNT = diffuse glioneuronal tumor, L = left, R = right, Le = samples from main lesion/lesionectomy, TL = anterior temporal lobectomy (including temporal pole, middle temporal gyrus [MTG], inferior temporal gyrus [ITG] and part of fusiform gyrus [FG], and superior temporal gyrus [STG]), HB = hippocampal body, PHG = parahippocampal gyrus, PES = pes hippocampus, Amyg = amygdala, CUSA = cavitron ultrasonic aspiration samples (either from lesion, amygdala or PHG).
Indicates cases where there was a mismatch between the pathology and the MRI diagnosis.
dGNT had a focal ganglioglioma component.
Cases had a diffuse pattern but with some mixed components of conventional DNT.
FIGURE 1.Diffuse GNT. Case 10 (A–D) and Case 19 (E–I). (A) Coronal T2 weighted images showing cortical based lesion of high signal intensity with subcortical white matter involvement involving the right fusiform gyrus. Note the cortical part of the lesion that is creating a bridge into the adjacent sulcus (between arrowheads) shown in higher magnification. There is signal change in the white matter (arrow). (B) Macroscopic image of fixed resection specimen with the slice corresponding to the lesion seen on MRI; there is focal peri-operative acute hemorrhage into the expanded gyrus. (C) H&E-stained section indicates the infiltrated gyrus (between arrows) and underlying rarefaction in the white matter correlating with loss of myelin and axons (arrow). (D) CD34 of the same gyrus at high magnifications shows the diffuse cellular infiltration of the cortex bridging over to the next gyrus. Case 19: (E) dGNT (which also had areas of mixed complex DNT, not shown here) with lesion in MRI in the amygdala (arrow). (F) In the temporal lobe resection, diffuse infiltration was confirmed in the inferior-mesial part of the cortex (arrow). (G) Depletion of neurons seen in this region of diffuse tumors infiltration on NeuN stain (arrow). (H) Diffuse tumor infiltration in the grey matter from the tissue of the lesion in the amygdala. (I) This same region shows CD34 positivity of tumor cells. Bars: D = 500 μm; H, I = ∼300 μm.
FIGURE 2.Diffuse DNT with cortical and white matter atrophy. Case 11 (A–F) and Case 9 (G–J). (A) Coronal T1 weighted MR images showing a lesion involving the left fusiform and inferior temporal gyri. (B) The lesion is shown at higher magnification with cortical atrophy with underlying white matter rarefaction in the region of tumor infiltration as well as apparent overlying retraction of cortex and a superficial CSF filled space. (C) The fixed resected specimen showing atrophic discolored cortex (arrowed) and underlying cavitated white matter (star in each image); arrowhead indicates region of normal cortical thickness. (D) CD34 confirmed extensive cortical tumor infiltration in this region. (E) Panel of NeuN showed, on left laminar cortex in preserved region (arrowhead in D) compared with middle and right images of tumor infiltration region with laminar cortical atrophy in region of infiltration. (F) Synaptophysin also highlights laminar neuronal loss in tumor infiltration region (arrow) imparting an impression of cortical “collapse” rather than expansion. Case 9: (G) Macroscopic section of diffuse GNT with evidence of cortical atrophy (arrow) and extension into the leptomeningeal tissues forming a mass (asterisk) and with poor definition between grey and white matter. (H) NeuN on a section from G confirms the thinning and laminar atrophy of the cortex (arrow) and the lack of a ganglion component in the leptomeninges (asterisk). (I) Higher magnification of the region shown by arrow in (H) showing laminar neuronal loss and on CD34 in the same region evidence of tumor infiltration. (J) H&E stain shows focal cavitation and rarefaction of white matter underlying the infiltrated cortex. Bar in J = ∼400 μm.
Frequency of Each Feature in the 3 Subtypes of LEAT: Simple, Complex DNT and Diffuse Glioneuronal Tumor (GNT)
| Radiological Features | Simple DNT % (Number of Cases | Complex DNT % (Number of Cases | Diffuse GNT % (Number Of Cases | p Value # | Pathology Feature | Simple DNT % (Number of Cases | Complex DNT % (Number of Cases | Diffuse GNT % (Number of Cases | p Value # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expansion of the cortex | 50% (3/3) | 75% (6/8) | 8% (1/13) | 0.026 | Macroscopic cysts | 0% (0/6) | 25% (2/8) | 8% (1/13) | 0.4 |
| Multi-gyral involvement | 33% (2/6) | 75% (6/8) | 38% (5/13) | 0.023 | Microscopic cysts | 33% (2/6) | 75% (6/8) | 15% (2/13) | 0.06 |
| Cystic components | 50% (3/6) | 88% (7/8) | 62% (8/13) | 0.03 | Distinct nodules | 17% (1/6) | 100% (8/8) | 38% (5/13) | |
| Calcification | 0% (0/6) | 0% (0/8) | 46% (6/13) | 0.018 | Nodules within tumor | 17% (1/6) | 0% (0/8) | 70% (9/13) | |
| Hemorrhage | 0% (0/6) | 13% (1/8) | 23% (3/13) | 0.42 | Glioneuronal element | 100% (6/6) | 100% (8/8) | 8% (1/13) | |
| Mass effect | 33% (2/4) | 50% (4/8) | 15% (2/13) | 0.49 | Ventricle extension | 17% (1/6) | 25% (2/8) | 0% (0/13) | 0.3 |
| Bone remodeling | 0% (0/6) | 50% (4/8) | 0% (0/13) | Mucoid matrix | 67% (4/6) | 100% (8/8) | 0% (0/13) | ||
| Single well-defined lesion without abnormal signal around it | 50% (3/6) | 25% (2/8) | 0% (0/13) | Diffuse growth-predominant pattern | 0% (0/6) | 0% (0/8) | 84% (11/13) | ||
| Multicystic | 0% (0/6) | 100% (8/8) | 36% (4/11) | Dysmorphic neurons absent | 100% (6/6) | 88% (7/8) | 38% (5/13) | ||
| “Bubbly” appearance | 33 (2/6) | 88% (7/8) | 8% (1/13) | Calcification | 0% (0/6) | 12% (1/8) | 38% (5/13) | 0.65 | |
| Perilesional/subcortical white matter signal change | 0% (0/6) | 13% (1/8) | 100% ( | Reticulin rich regions | 0% (0/6) | 0% (0/8) | 15% (2/13) | 0.3 | |
| Wedge shaped lesion | 17% (1/6) | 75% (6/8) | 8% (1/13) | Pigmentation (marked or focal) | 17% (1/6) | 75% (6/8) | 77% (10/13) | 0.033 | |
| Focal high signal rim on FLAIR | 100% | 88% (7/8) | 62% (8/13) | 0.137 | White matter changes: | 0.017 | |||
| Marked rarefaction | 0% (0/6) | 0% (0/8) | 30% (4/13) | ||||||
| Subtle myelin loss | 0% (0/6) | 25% (2/8) | 38% (5/13) | ||||||
| Focal cortical atrophy with prominent adjacent sulcus | 0% (0/6) | 12.% (1/8) | 92% (12/13) | Adjacent cortex layer I hypercellular | 0% (0/6) | 0% (0/8) | 54% (7/13) | 0.02 | |
| Enhancement | 0% (0/6) | 25% (2/6) | 46% (6/13) | 0.055 | Dyslamination beyond tumor infiltration zone | 0% (0/6) | 0% (0/8) | 0% (0/13) | 0.15 |
| Close contact with ventricle | 33% (2/6) | 75% (6/8) | 15% (2/13) | 0.026 | CD34 tumoral expression | 0% (0/6) | 25% (2/8) | 100% (13/13) |
These features were used as initial defining criteria to classify the cases. There were no statistically significant differences between simple and complex DNT. Significance is shown for each feature in discriminating between DNT and diffuse GNT subtypes (K–Wallis test); significant values shown in bold as p < 0.01. The presence of rosettes, eosinophilic granular bodies, Rosenthal fibers, necrosis, or mitotic activity was noted in 0–15% of cases, similar across all tumor groups and therefore not further analyzed.
FIGURE 3.Diffuse GNT with focal gangliogliomatous component. Case 16 (A–H) and Case 17 (J–O). (A) Coronal T1, (B) FLAIR, and (C) T2 weighted MR images showing apparent cortical atrophy underlying white matter signal abnormality with multigyral involvement by the tumor. (D) The main temporal lobe resection specimen included the middle temporal gyrus the inferior temporal gyrus (ITG) and part of the fusiform gyrus (FG). The ITG (shown in square) was infiltrated by a diffuse tumor: (E, F) The same region at higher magnifications shows infiltration of the cortex, reduced neuronal density being “displaced” by NeuN-negative oligodendrocyte-like cells which distort the neuronal morphology. (G) Higher magnification of this same region showing clusters of CD34-positive tumor cells in the cortex and cortical layer I; these are shown in H and in high magnification in I. A sample from the main lesion in the amygdala contained a small focus with atypical gangliod cells. Case 17: (J) Coronal T1, (K) T2, and (L) FLAIR weighted MR images showing left temporal lobe lesion centered on the parahippocampal gyrus with perilesional signal abnormality and cortical atrophy in the adjacent temporal lobe. (M) The main temporal lobe resection including the inferior temporal gyrus (ITG) showed microscopic evidence of diffuse infiltration as shown on CD34 stain in (N); note the widespread labeling of CD34-positive cells along subpial border in layer I (arrow). In deeper sections, a focus of atypical ganglion cells was noted in the superior aspect at the inferior-medial resection margin (arrowhead); (O) this correlated with calbindin positivity and synaptophysin-positive atypical gangliod cells are shown in this region in the inset. Bars: F = 250 μm; G, H, N (inset) = ∼60 μm.
FIGURE 4.Diffuse GNT with mixed features of DNT. Case 21: A lesion centered in the left parahippocampal gyrus. (A) Coronal T1, (B) T2, and (C) FLAIR MR images showing the lesion involving the left parahippocampal gyrus with a triangular wedge-shaped appearance and a multiple cystic appearance. The wedge-shaped lesion points toward the temporal horn of the left lateral ventricle and the appearance of the tumor in this region resembles the complex subtype of DNT. (D) Tissue from the main lesion showed glioneuronal element with floating neurons characteristic of DNT on NeuN stain. (E) In the main temporal lobe specimen, which included the fusiform gyrus (FG) and part of the parahippocampal gyrus (PHG), there was diffuse pattern of tumor infiltration which was the dominant overall growth pattern as shown on NeuN stain in (F). The region shown in the square is shown at higher magnification in (G) and rotated 180°. (H) The infiltrating cells showed patchy CD34 labeling. (I) Coronal T1, (J) T2, and (K) FLAIR corresponding to the level shown in (E) confirmed an ill-defined white matter signal abnormality with cortical atrophy; this part of the lesion resembled diffuse GNT. Bars: D = 100 μm; G, H = ∼175 μm, based on original magnifications.