| Literature DB >> 30723703 |
Keenan Piper1, Haidn Foster1,2, Brandon Gabel3, Burt Nabors4, Charles Cobbs1.
Abstract
Viral encephalitis and glioblastoma are both relatively rare conditions with poor prognoses. While the clinical and radiographic presentations of these diseases are often distinctly different, viral encephalitis can sometimes masquerade as glioblastoma. Rarely, glioblastoma can also be misdiagnosed as viral encephalitis. In some cases where a high-grade glioma was initially diagnosed as viral encephalitis, antiviral administration has proven effective for relieving early symptoms. We present three cases in which patients presented with symptoms and radiographic findings suggestive of viral encephalitis and experienced dramatic clinical improvement following treatment with acyclovir, only to later be diagnosed with glioblastoma in the region of suspected encephalitis and ultimately succumb to tumor progression.Entities:
Keywords: GBM; acyclovir; antiviral; encephalitis; glioblastoma; glioma; herpes simplex encephalitis; viral encephalitis
Year: 2019 PMID: 30723703 PMCID: PMC6350341 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.00008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1FLAIR images (A,C,E,F) T1 post-gadolinium images (B,D,F,G) of the patient at increasing days post-admission (P.A. d) and after administration of IV acyclovir (ACV d). Arrows in A, C, and E demonstrate decreasing FLAIR signal in the left frontal white matter from day 1 to day 17 of acyclovir administration. Double arrows in (B,D,F) demonstrate decreasing left frontal sulcal effacement and increasing size of the left frontal enhancing lesion. Increasing FLAIR signal and increasing size of the enhancing lesion on T1 post-gadolinium of the left frontal lobe are again noted on post-admission day 45 and post-acyclovir day 17 (G,H).
Cases of glioblastoma masquerading as viral encephalitis.
| This study | M | 76 | Yes | Neg | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Unknown |
| M | 77 | Yes | N/A | Unknown | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | |
| M | 78 | No | Neg | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | |
| Rees and Howard ( | F | 41 | Yes | Neg | No | Yes | No | Yes | Unknown |
| M | 49 | Yes | Neg | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | |
| F | 72 | Yes | Neg | No | Yes | No | No | Unknown | |
| Nam et al. ( | M | 70 | Yes | Neg | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unknown |
| Wang and Luo ( | M | 50 | Yes | Neg | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Smithson and Larner ( | M | 48 | Yes | Neg | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Sun et al. ( | M | 56 | Yes | Neg | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
Defined as one or more characteristics consistent with viral encephalitis, e.g., moderately elevated protein, elevated mononuclear cell count, and/or moderately decreased glucose.