| Literature DB >> 35079536 |
Shanta Thapa1, Shingo Fujio1,2, Ikumi Kitazono3, Masanori Yonenaga1,2, Keisuke Masuda1, Shinichi Kuroki1, Madan Bajagain1, Kazutaka Yatsushiro4, Koji Yoshimoto1,2.
Abstract
Solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) or hemangiopericytoma (HPC) is a rare fibroblastic tumor of mesenchymal origin. SFT or HPC comprises <1% of all primary central nervous system tumors. SFT or HPC of the sellar or suprasellar region is even more unusual. We herein report a sellar SFT or HPC in an octogenarian who achieved favorable progress with partial removal followed by fractionated gamma knife radiosurgery. An 87-year-old woman presented with occasional headache and visual field defects. A rapidly growing tumor of the sella turcica was diagnosed. The patient underwent endoscopic transnasal transsphenoidal surgery; however, only partial resection of the tumor was possible, as it was fibrous and hard with increased vascularity. A histological examination confirmed the tumor to be grade II SFT or HPC. Two months after the resection, the residual tumor grew rapidly. Given the patient's advanced age, re-surgery was not the preferred option; thus, fractionated gamma knife radiosurgery (marginal dose, 30 Gy in five fractions) was performed. MRI and visual field examination performed 3 months after irradiation revealed tumor shrinkage and improvement in the visual field, respectively. One year and three months after irradiation, the tumor continued to shrink and her visual field had improved. Taking age into consideration, partial resection with fractionated gamma knife radiosurgery was the more appropriate choice for both local tumor control and the safety of the optic apparatus.Entities:
Keywords: aged; fractionated gamma knife radiosurgery; hemangiopericytoma; sella turcica; solitary fibrous tumors
Year: 2021 PMID: 35079536 PMCID: PMC8769461 DOI: 10.2176/nmccrj.cr.2021-0103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NMC Case Rep J ISSN: 2188-4226
Reported cases of SFT or hemangiopericytoma of the sella, including the present case
| SN | Author | Year | Sex | Age (years) | Variant | Signs/symptoms | Treatment | Follow-up duration/recurrence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cassarino et al. | 2003 | F | 54 | SFT | Headache, VD | Partial resection | NA |
| 2 | Pakasa et al. | 2005 | F | 66 | SFT | VD | Partial resection | Recurrence in 2 years |
| 3 | Kim et al. | 2005 | M | 56 | SFT | VD | Complete resection | NA |
| 4 | Macfarlane et al. | 2005 | M | 33 | SFT | Headache, VD | Partial resection + radiotherapy + chemotherapy | NR up to 18 months |
| 5 | Juco et al. | 2007 | F | 18 | HPC | VD | Partial resection + radiotherapy | NR up to 27 months |
| 6 | Jalali et al. | 2008 | M | 35 | HPC | VD | Complete resection | Recurrence in 6 months |
| 7 | Furlanetto et al. | 2009 | M | 28 | SFT | VD | Complete resection | NR up to 10 months |
| 8 | Das et al. | 2010 | M | 47 | HPC | Headache, VD | Partial resection + radiotherapy | NR up to 3 years |
| 9 | Yin et al. | 2010 | M | 32 | SFT | Headache, VD | Partial resection + radiosurgery | NR up to 44 months |
| 10 | Jain et al. | 2012 | M | 63 | SFT | Headache, VD | Partial resection + radiotherapy | NR up to 8 months |
| 11 | Wu et al. | 2012 | M | 53 | SFT | VD | Partial resection | NR up to 7 months |
| 12 | Esquenazi et al. | 2014 | M | 51 | HPC | VD | Partial resection + repeated surgery | NA |
| 13 | Yang et al. | 2015 | F | 20 | SFT | Headache, VD | Partial resection | NR up to 4 years |
| 14 | Yang et al. | 2015 | M | 22 | SFT | VD | Complete resection | NR up to 2 years |
| 15 | Sahai et al. | 2016 | M | 70 | SFT | VD | Partial resection + radiotherapy | NR up to 1 year |
| 16 | Gibson et al. | 2017 | M | 34 | HPC III | VD | Partial resection + radiosurgery | Recurrence at 2 to 4 months. Died of pulmonary embolism at 7 months |
| 17 | Nesaratnam et al. | 2017 | F | 73 | SFT or HPC III | Headache, VD | Surgery + radiotherapy | NA |
| 18 | Present case | 2020 | F | 87 | SFT or HPC II | Headache, | Partial resection + radiosurgery | NR up to 15 months |
F: female, HPC: hemangiopericytoma, M: male, NA: not available, NR: no recurrence, SFT: solitary fibrous tumor, SN: serial number, VD: visual disturbance.
Fig. 1MRI of the lesion. (A) T1-weighted coronal image. (B) T2-weighted coronal image. (C) Gadolinium-enhanced coronal image. (D) Gadolinium-enhanced sagittal image. MRI demonstrates a mass in the sella and suprasellar regions, which has an isointense signal on T1-weighted imaging and an iso-hyperintense signal on T2-weighted imaging (A and B). The mass has heterogeneous enhancement on contrast administration (C and D), and the anterior pituitary gland is displaced to the upper right side (C, arrowheads).
Fig. 2Histology and immunohistochemistry. HE staining shows spindle-shaped cells arranged around the blood vessels (A) (×200). Presence of staghorn vasculature (A, arrow). CD34 staining indications were strongly positive for vascular endothelial cells and weakly positive for tumor cells (B) (×200). Clearly visible nuclear expression of STAT6 (C) (×200). TTF-1 is negative (D) (×200). HE: hematoxylin and eosin.
Fig. 3Coronal image of gadolinium-enhanced MRI performed 2 months after surgery (A), and 3 months (B) and 1 year and 3 months (C) after gamma knife radiosurgery. The residual tumor displayed rapid growth and the tumor’s extraction cavity was reduced (A, arrow). MRI demonstrates that the tumor in the sella shrank efficiently (B and C).