| Literature DB >> 31632463 |
Bérengère Chignon-Sicard1, Véronique Hofman2, Daniel Chevallier3, Jean-Michel Cucchi4, Marius Ilié2, Bérengère Dadone-Montaudié5, Florence Paul6, Xavier Carpentier7, Hervé Quintens7, Coraline Bence-Gauchiez8, Didier Caselles9, Jacqueline Rossant10, Matthieu Durand11, Roger Bertolotti12.
Abstract
A 72-year-old Caucasian man incurring a prostate hypertrophy presented with a right forearm nodule, the growth of which appeared to parallel the rise in his blood prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level. Echographic examination was consistent with a median-nerve schwannoma, and was confirmed upon magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Excision of the nodule was readily performed without significant neural damage, and its schwannoma nature was confirmed upon immunohistochemistry analysis. Importantly, blood PSA dropped abruptly from ≈13 to ≈5 ng/ml within 2 months postschwannoma resection, a swift drastic reduction unachievable with oral dutasteride alone. However, 6 weeks later, a new nodule became apparent on the back of the left knee and was identified as a second schwannoma, thereby suggesting that its growth could have been stimulated by the resection of the first schwannoma, as previously described for vestibular schwannomas. The second schwannoma was in fact two: the bigger one was in the common fibular nerve and the smaller one in the tibial nerve. Both echography and MRI results were confirmed upon surgical resection of the bigger knee schwannoma. Although the third schwannoma has not yet been resected and formally characterized, we face a schwannomatosis case with an unexpected potential exosome-mediated stimulating effect on PSA secretion (PSA immunohistochemistry was negative on both schwannomas). On the other hand, preliminary genomic analysis showed a deficient balance for chromosome 22, the very chromosome carrying the three main genes involved in schwannomatosis. This age-related schwannomatosis case is thus discussed in light of the following: age-related DNA repair deficiency culminating in loss of chromosome/heterozygosity; CpG methylation/demethylation-based epigenetic aging; age-related functional decline of the immune system responsible for inefficient elimination of abnormal cells and subsequent tumorigenic cell turn-over; exosome-mediated pathologic intercellular communications; and prostate-invading brain neural progenitors as pathologic peripheral nervous system (PNS) cells.Entities:
Keywords: age-related schwannomatosis; chromosome 22 somatic loss; pathologic exosome-mediated intercellular communications; prostate hyperplasia
Year: 2019 PMID: 31632463 PMCID: PMC6767708 DOI: 10.1177/1756287219875578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Adv Urol ISSN: 1756-2872
Figure 1.Intraoperative view of the right-forearm schwannoma. Full enucleation of the schwannoma from the median nerve was readily achieved: the nerve/tumor complex was isolated from the surrounding structures (a), a well-defined cleavage plane was demonstrated and the tumor was meticulously dissected from the nerve fascicles (b), and then completely removed (c). The nodule was a ≈3 cm beige ball weighing ≈7 g.
Figure 2.Microscopic characterization of the right-forearm schwannoma. (a) HES stain, ×100 magnification. (b) S100 protein immunostaining, ×100 magnification.
HES, Hematoxylin-eosin-safran.
Case report synopsis.
| Avodart | S1 exeresis | Knee S2 S3 | S2 exeresis | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date | 27 November 2017 | 10 January 2018 | 16 February 2018 | 14 March 2018 | 10 April 2018 | 18 June 2018 | 18 July 2018 | 21 August 2018 | 24 September 2018 | 24 October 2018 | 14 November 2018 | 14 December 2018 | 14 January 2019 | 25 February 2019 | 27 March 2019 |
| PSA | 12.76 | 14.07 | 14.32 | 14.79 | 13.04 | 7.50 | 4.93 | 7.12 | 4.86 | 12.09 | 5.67 | 5.41 | 4.82 | 4.21 | 3.37 |
| PSA | 0.12 | 0.12 | 0.12 | 0.11 | 0.16 | 0.13 | ND | 0.22 | 0.17 | 0.10 | ND | 0.18 | 0.15 | 0.16 | 0.18 |
| Prostate | 6 February 2018 | 19 June 2018 | 27 November 2018 |
March 2018: Beginning of dutasteride medication.
May 2018: First schwannoma resection (S1, right forearm, median nerve).
July 2018: Second schwannoma apparition (left knee, double schwannoma S2, S3).
October 2018: Second schwannoma resection (S2, common fibular nerve).
MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PSA, prostate-specific antigen.
Figure 3.Preoperative MRI evaluation (a,b) and intraoperative view (c,d) of the left-knee nodule. Two well-circumscribed lesions involving the common fibular nerve and the tibial nerve, respectively, were identified (a,b). While they both exhibited an heterogenous T2 hypersignal, they showed a weak and strong gadolinium-mediated enhancement (not shown), respectively. The common fibular nerve schwannoma was larger (24 × 14 mm) than the tibial nerve one (15 × 9 mm) and was readily enucleated without any neural damage (c,d). The common fibular nerve was carefully handled and its upper part with its lateral sural cutaneous branch was surgery free (c).
MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 4.Microscopic characterization of the larger left-knee schwannoma (common fibular nerve nodule). (a) HES stain, ×50 magnification. (b) S100 protein immunostaining, ×100 magnification.
HES, Hematoxylin-eosin-safran.