| Literature DB >> 31850213 |
Kristen A Batich1,2,3, Richard F Riedel2,4, John P Kirkpatrick3,4,5,6, Betty C Tong4,7, William C Eward4,8, Char Loo Tan9,10, Patricia D Pittman9, Roger E McLendon3,4,9, Katherine B Peters3,4,6.
Abstract
Myxopapillary ependymomas are a slow-growing, grade I type glial tumor in the lumbosacral region. More rarely, they can present as extradural, subcutaneous sacrococcygeal, or perisacral masses, and it is under these circumstances that they are more likely to spread. Here, we report the presentation of a sacrococcygeal mass in patient that was initially resected confirming extradural myxopapillary ependymoma. At initial resection, multiple small pulmonary nodules were detected. This mass recurred 2 years later at the resection site with an interval increase in the previously imaged pulmonary nodules. Resection of both the post-sacral mass and largest lung metastasis confirmed recurrent myxopapillary ependymoma with oligometastatic spread. Because these tumors are rare, with extradural presentation being even more infrequent, to this date there are no definitive therapeutic guidelines for initial treatment and continued surveillance. For myxopapillary ependymoma, current standard of care is first-line maximal surgical resection with or without postoperative radiotherapy depending on the extent of disease and extent of resection. However, there remains insufficient evidence on the role of radiotherapy to oligometastatic foci in providing any further survival benefit or extending time to recurrence. Thus, prospective studies assessing the role of upfront treatment of oligometastases with local resection and adjuvant radiotherapy are needed for improved understanding of extradural myxopapillary ependymoma.Entities:
Keywords: extradural; glial fibrillary acidic protein; myxopapillary ependymoma; oligometastases; post-sacral
Year: 2019 PMID: 31850213 PMCID: PMC6892774 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.01322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1MRI of sacrococcygeal mass prior to initial resection. (A) Axial view of fat-saturated T2-weighted and (B) contrast-enhanced T1-weighted sequences demonstrate a lobulated expansile mass confined to the soft tissues affixed between the gluteal muscles. The mass on sagittal view is (C) T2 hyperintense well-encapsulated within the post-sacral soft tissues without invasion into the sacrococcygeal space and (D) heterogeneously enhancing with central necrosis.
Figure 2Histopathology of primary postsacral mass and lung metastasis. (A) Left: photomicrographs of initially resected postsacral mass demonstrates tumor composed of papillary structures lined by cuboidal glial cells with an intermediate layer of myxoid stroma (original magnification, ×100). Middle: numerous mucin-rich microcysts (short arrows) and mitotic figures (thin arrows) (original magnification ×200). Right: tumor cells are diffusely positive for GFAP (original magnification, ×100). (B) Initial lung biopsy of the right lower lobe nodule (8 mm) demonstrates a metastatic mucin-rich tumor (left photo) with adjacent non-neoplastic lung and (right) metastatic focus demonstrating diffuse reactivity with GFAP (original magnification ×100).
Figure 3Pulmonary oligometastases upon detection of recurrent sacrococcygeal mass. (A) Axial views of the lungs revealing a small, discrete homogeneously hyperdense nodule (black circle) in the right lower lobe (left) that had doubled in size since initial resection (8 mm from 4 mm) and enlarging left lower lobe (middle) and right lower lobe (right) metastases. (B) Recurrent post-sacral mass on axial (left) and sagittal (middle, right) fat-saturated contrast-enhanced T1-weighted sequences is heterogeneously enhancing and multilobulated in appearance as it extends through the soft tissues without invasion into the coccyx.
Figure 4Restaging of recurrent soft tissue mass prior to and following resection. (A) Pre-resection sagittal view with contrast-enhanced T1-weighted image showing a multilobulated mass extending from the first through fourth coccygeal segments bordered by a thin plane of fat interposed between the tumor and coccyx without evidence of coccygeal invasion (black arrow). (B) Status post-coccygectomy and resection cavity (black arrow) of the previously described associated lobulated mass.