| Literature DB >> 29644158 |
Mauricio Martinez-Moreno1, Olga O Galván de la Cruz2, Christian H Flores-Balcázar3, Samuel Rosales-Pérez4, Daniel Rembao-Bojórquez5, Sergio Moreno-Jiménez6.
Abstract
Supratentorial relapses are a common component of medulloblastoma after failure of treatment. Craniospinal irradiation (CSI) to cerebrospinal fluid-bearing areas is an essential part of the management of these tumors both in adults and children. Failure of treatment in specific anatomical regions can be attributable to technical inaccuracies in CSI technique leading to radiation underdosing in such areas. We present two cases of patients with bilateral simultaneous metastasis of a primary medulloblastoma treated, in both cases, four years before the recurrence. In both patients the tumors were mirror images, at the right and left temporal pole. Radiotherapeutic plans were analyzed in both cases, and a possible mechanism determining the pattern of relapse is discussed. We consider, in agreement with the literature, that a prone position during treatment, shielding blocks at the cribiform/subfrontal region, and anatomic inadequacies in the CSI fields could have contributed to the presented pattern of relapse.Entities:
Keywords: bilateral relapse; medulloblastoma; supratentorial
Year: 2018 PMID: 29644158 PMCID: PMC5889163 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.2170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Radiologic and histopathologic representative images
Radiologic (A-D) and histopathologic (E-H) representative images of the presented cases. An MRI after gadolinium injection showed a 5 cm globular mass with heterogeneous enhancement and peripheral edema over both temporopolar areas in Case 1 (white arrows)(A). The postoperative MRI after gadolinium injection demonstrated total gross resection in the patient after two surgical procedures (B). The histopathology report confirmed a classic medulloblastoma for both tumors as microscopically visualized with H/E staining technique (E and F; right and left tumor, respectively; Hematoxilin/Eosin, 40x,). In Case 2, a T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging after injection of gadolinium similarly showed a mass with heterogeneous enhancement and peripheral edema on both temporal poles (white arrows) (C). After surgical management, a postoperative MRI with contrast medium demonstrated total gross resection of both tumors (D). The neuropathology report confirmed classic medulloblastoma in the right and left tumors of Case 2 (G and H, respectively; Hematoxilin/Eosin 40x). MRI - Magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 2Prone vs supine position for radiotherapy treatment
Radiotherapeutic plan for CSI in supine position (white arrow) (A). Radiotherapeutic plan for CSI in prone position; protection blockage of the eyes could contribute to underdosing of the temporopolar area located just behind the created shield. A prone position during the CSI session could also contribute in a gravity-related fashion to tumor seeding (white arrow) (B). CSI - Craniospinal irradiation.