| Literature DB >> 31824861 |
Joshua A Cuoco1,2,3,4, Brendan J Klein1,2,3,4, Christopher M Busch1,2,3,4, Evin L Guilliams1,2,3,4, Adeolu L Olasunkanmi1,2,3,4, John J Entwistle1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Corticosteroid-induced regression of lesion contrast enhancement on imaging studies is most commonly appreciated with primary central nervous system lymphoma; however, although exceedingly rare, a limited number of primary and metastatic intracranial lesions have been reported to exhibit similar radiographic changes subsequent to corticosteroid therapy. To date, there have been six cases of glioblastoma reported to exhibit such changes. Lesion transformation on repeat imaging after the initiation of steroids represents a diagnostic dilemma for clinicians when attempting to differentiate between a diagnosis of glioblastoma and lymphoma. Stereotactic biopsy may be inadvertently postponed due to high clinical suspicion for steroid-induced cytotoxicity traditionally seen with lymphomatous cells. To highlight this radiographic conundrum, we present a rare case of corticosteroid-induced regression of glioblastoma and discuss the relevant literature. To our knowledge, this is the first case report to describe the molecular profile of a glioblastoma that underwent corticosteroid-induced regression.Entities:
Keywords: astrocytoma; brain tumor; corticosteroid; dexamethasone; glioblastoma; neuro-oncology; regression; vanishing tumor
Year: 2019 PMID: 31824861 PMCID: PMC6882932 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.01288
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1CT head pre- and post-corticosteroid therapy. (A,B) Initial CT head pre-corticosteroid therapy revealed a large hypodense lesion in the right parietal lobe with vasogenic edema. (C,D) Repeat CT head 4 weeks after post-corticosteroid therapy revealed a decrease in vasogenic edema and apparent size of the lesion.
Figure 2MRI of the brain pre- and post-corticosteroid therapy. (A) Initial T1-weighted imaging without evidence of subacute hemorrhage. (B–D) Initial MRI MP-RAGE sequences of the brain pre-corticosteroid therapy demonstrated a thick-walled peripherally enhancing lesion of the right parietal lobe with central necrosis and extensive surrounding vasogenic edema. (E) Initial gradient echo sequence without evidence of subacute hemorrhage. (F) Repeat T1-weighted imaging without evidence of subacute hemorrhage. (G–I) Repeat MRI MP-RAGE sequences of the brain 5 weeks after post-corticosteroid therapy demonstrated reduction in contrast enhancement, vasogenic edema, and apparent size of the lesion. (J) Repeat gradient echo sequence without evidence of subacute hemorrhage.
Figure 3Histopathology demonstrating pleomorphic glial cells, nuclear atypia, palisading necrosis, mitoses, and vascular proliferation consistent with a diagnosis of glioblastoma. (A,B) Palisading necrosis at 4x and 10x magnification, respectively. (C) Mitoses at 40x magnification. (D) Vascular proliferation at 10x magnification.
Figure 4Post-operative imaging. (A,B) Post-operative CT Head demonstrated expected post-operative changes without evidence of acute pathology.
Summary of reported cases of corticosteroid-induced regression of glioblastoma.
| 1997 | Buxton et al. | 56 M | No | Left frontoparietal | Disappearance of lesion and enhancement | 3 weeks | Same | 6 mg per day, unspecified duration | None | Death immediately subsequent to biopsy | NR | ( |
| 2004 | Zaki et al. | 53 M | Yes | Right parietal, splenium | Reduced enhancement in parietal lesion, increased splenial enhancement | 3 weeks | Same | 16 mg per day for 3 weeks | Radiotherapy | NR | NR | ( |
| 2004 | Zaki et al. | 75 M | Yes | Right parietal, splenium | Reduced enhancement in parietal lesion, increased splenial enhancement | 3 weeks | Splenium only | 16 mg per day for 3 weeks | None | Death before radiation, unspecified timing | NR | ( |
| 2009 | Hasegawa et al. | 59 M | No | Left parietal | Reduced enhancement | 4 weeks | Same | 16 mg per day for 4 weeks | NR | NR | NR | ( |
| 2009 | Goh et al. | 61 F | Yes | Right temporal, splenium | Near resolution of all lesions | 4 weeks | Same plus new right frontal lesion | 16 mg per day for 4 weeks | Radiotherapy | Death ~4 months after reappearance | NR | ( |
| 2012 | Mazur et al. | 57 F | No | Right temporoparietal extending into splenium | Reduced enhancement | 2 weeks | Same plus leptomeningeal carcinomatosis | 16 mg per day for 5 days | Radiotherapy, temozolomide | Alive 2 months after radiographic change | NR | ( |
| 2019 | Cuoco et al. | 76 M | No | Right parietal | Reduced enhancement | N/A | N/A | 16 mg per day for 5 weeks tapered | None | Death 1 month after surgery | Wildtype IDH1/2 |
M, male; NR, not reported; F, female; N/A, not applicable; IDH, isocitrate dehydrogenase; MGMT, O.