| Literature DB >> 35117472 |
Aimaiti Yasen1,2,3, Bo Ran1,2,3, Tiemin Jiang1, Yusufukadier Maimaitinijiati1,2,3, Ruiqing Zhang1, Qiang Guo1, Yingmei Shao1,2,3, Tuerganaili Aji1,2,3, Hao Wen1,2,3.
Abstract
This report describes the clinical features, diagnostic and treatment modalities of a 62-year-old female patient with liver metastasis and local recurrence of meningeal hemangiopericytoma (HPC), who presented with the clinical manifestations of memory deterioration, visual reduction and abdominal mass for one month. Skull and abdominal computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and 18FFluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET)-CT were used for pre-surgery identification. Lesions without FDG uptake and less tumoral viability was observed through FDG-PET-CT, which was characteristic features of HPC before operation. The intraoperative specimens from the liver resection and the calvarium were pathologically examined for further confirming the diagnosis. The patient underwent liver resection and bilateral frontal cerebral convex and parafalx resection as well as intracranial pressure sensor implantation for liver metastasis and local recurrence of HPC respectively. The patient recovered well and no recurrence or distant metastasis was found after 2-year follow-up. Early diagnosis and long-term follow-up are crucial for patients with hepatic metastasis or local recurrence of HPC, and FDG-PET-CT is recommended as an ideal imaging tool. Radical resection of HPC lesions is considered as an optimal treating approach. 2020 Translational Cancer Research. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Meningeal hemangiopericytoma (HPC); case report; liver; metastasis; recurrence
Year: 2020 PMID: 35117472 PMCID: PMC8798491 DOI: 10.21037/tcr.2019.12.05
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Cancer Res ISSN: 2218-676X Impact factor: 1.241
Figure 1The timeline picture. The timeline picture presenting the related information and care of the patient.
Figure 2Representative imaging and postoperative pathological results. (A) Preoperative skull 18FDG-PET-CT, showing high density lesion without FDG uptake and less tumoral viability near the left frontal lobe parafalx (red arrows); (B,C,D) abdominal FDG-PET-CT and contrast-enhanced CT revealing low density solid lesions without FDG uptake in the right posterior and left outer lobes of the liver (red arrows); (E,F) hematoxylin eosin staining indicating the spindle-like tumor cells with moderate pleomorphism, oval nuclei and a moderate amount of cytoplasm (20× magnification). FDG-PET-CT, 18FFluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography computed tomography.
Figure 3Typical postoperative imaging photos in 2-year follow-up. (A) Skull CT demonstrating basic postoperative changes in the bilateral frontal; (B) skull MRI also revealing no special abnormality only with some changes after surgery. CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.