| Literature DB >> 31396432 |
Marco Meloni1, Salvatore Serra1, Giulia Bellisano2, Nikolaos Syrmos3, Sanjeeva Jeyaretna4, Mario Ganau4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gliosarcoma (GS) represents a rare, high-grade (WHO Grade IV), central nervous system neoplasm, characterized by a very poor prognosis. Similar to other high-grade gliomas, GS affects mainly adults in the 5th-7th decade of life and presents a higher incidence in males. The most reported locations of GS are the temporal lobe and the frontal lobe, while only eight cases of GS originating from the posterior cranial fossa are reported in the literature. CASE DESCRIPTION: We report the first case occurring during pregnancy in a 33-year-old patient. Diagnosis was obtained on the 15th week of gestation when patient presented with signs and symptoms of life-threatening raised intracranial pressure. Surgical excision was followed by early recurrence and eventually disease progression because the patient refused adjuvant treatment to save her fetus.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31396432 PMCID: PMC6664503 DOI: 10.1155/2019/7105361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Surg
Figure 1Preoperative T1 postgadolinium injection MRI (a) sagittal, (b) coronal and (c) axial, showing a meningioma-like lesion, localized at the base of the posterior cranial fossa and reaching the cortex of the right cerebellar hemisphere. Note the dural tail (black arrow) and the dilatation of the ventricular system (white arrow).
Figure 2Sections of the tumor showing distinct gliomatous and sarcomatous areas. (a) Cerebellar normal tissue and neoplastic proliferation (H&E magnification ×10); (b) neoplastic spindle elements, consolidated to bundles (H&E magnification ×10); (c) neoplastic elements show cellular and nuclear morphologic atypia with hyperchromic nuclei (H&E magnification ×20); (d) GFAP-positive immunohistochemical reaction (magnification ×40).
Clinical characteristics of primary GS cases with a posterior cranial fossa localization reported in the literature.
| Case | Age/gender | Clinical presentation | MRI features | Macro-/microscopic anatomy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 62/M | Ataxia, adiadocokinesia | Not reported | Firm tumor, with dural adhesion to the tentorium cerebelli |
| 2 | 71/M | Ataxia | Multiple lesions; perifocal edema; homogenous enhancement after gadolinium injection; broad base in contact with the dura mater | Firm, hemispheric well-circumscribed tumor, adherent to the dura; the superficial portion appeared sharply demarcated from the adjacent cerebellar tissue, intralesional hemorrhage/necrosis. |
| 3 | 80/M | Intracranial hypertension | Solid, homogeneously enhancing mass in the vermis and left cerebellar hemisphere; peritumoral edema causing mass effect and compression on the IV ventricle | Firm and pseudo-encapsulated lesion without attachment to pia or dura; marginal hemorrhage and intralesional necrosis |
| 4 | 70/F | Intracranial hypertension | Cerebellar intra-axial lesion, with a smooth and slightly lobulated outer layer; minimal peritumoral edema; heterogeneous enhancement after gadolinium injection | Relatively well-circumscribed and firm mass with areas of necrosis and hemorrhage |
| 5 | 68/M | Not reported | Not reported | Discrete lesion with GBM-like characteristics |
| 6 | 11/F | Ataxia, intracranial hypertension | Irregularly enhancing lesion located in the cerebellar vermis but characterized by bilateral extension; homogenous enhancement after gadolinium injection | Firm lesions reaching the surface of the cerebellum; white, glistening with areas of hemorrhage and necrosis |
| 7 | 57/M | Intracranial hypertension | Solid lesion, isointense to the brain parenchyma on T1WI, hyperintense on T2WI, peripheral homogeneous enhancement after gadolinium injection | Firm intra-axial lesion without attachment to the dura mater |
| 8 | 71/F | Intracranial hypertension | Solid, homogeneously enhancing, hemorrhagic mass in the cerebellopontine cistern | Well-circumscribed mass with intralesional hemorrhage |
| 9 | 33/F | Intracranial hypertension | Homogenously enhancing cortical-subcortical lesion localized on the right cerebellar hemisphere, responsible for perilesional edema and characterized by evidence of dural infiltration | Well-circumscribed and firm mass; white, glistening, with intralesional evidence of necrosis |