| Literature DB >> 29201475 |
Rubens Barros Costa1, Ricardo Costa1, Jason Kaplan1, Marcelo Rocha Cruz1, Hiral Shah1, Maria Matsangou1, Benedito Carneiro1.
Abstract
Glioblastoma multiforme is the most common malignant primary central nervous system neoplasm in adults. It has a very aggressive natural history with a median overall survival estimated at 14.6 months despite multimodality treatment. Extracranial metastases are very rare with few case reports published to date. We report the case of a 65-year-old male who underwent maximal safe resection for a newly diagnosed brain mass after presentation with new neurologic symptoms. He then received standard postsurgical adjuvant treatment for glioblastoma. Subsequently, he underwent another resection for early progressive disease. Several months later, he was hospitalized for new-onset musculoskeletal complaints. Additional investigation revealed new metastatic osseous lesions which were initially felt to be a new malignancy. The patient opted for supportive care and died 12 days later. Despite choosing no treatment, he elected to undergo a bone biopsy to understand the new underlying process. Results were that of metastatic GBM and were reported after the patient expired. Physicians caring for patients with GBM and new nonneurologic symptoms may contemplate body imaging.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29201475 PMCID: PMC5671696 DOI: 10.1155/2017/2938319
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Oncol Med
Figure 1Axial T2-weighted image demonstrating heterogeneous mass in the right parasagittal parietal lobe with extensive surrounding vasogenic edema.
Figure 2Axial T1-weighted image after administration of gadolinium demonstrating peripheral nodular enhancement of right parietal mass.
Figure 3Brain surgical specimen. High-grade glioma with foci of necrosis and microvascular proliferation consistent with glioblastoma multiforme (WHO Grade IV).
Figure 4Coronal T1- (left) and T2- (right) weighted images approximately 6 months following resection demonstrating extensive neoplastic lesions throughout both femurs, iliac bones, and the sacrum.
Figure 5GBM osseous metastasis (higher power). Microscopic sections showing a destructive cellular neoplasm with highly atypical and hyperchromatic tumor cells, abundant necrosis, and vascular proliferation.
Figure 6GBM with GFAP stain. GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein) immunohistochemical stain showing strong staining within the fibrillary cytoplasmic processes of the viable tumor cells.