| Literature DB >> 35741596 |
Kayli Colpitts1, Masoom J Desai2, Michael Kogan1, C William Shuttleworth3, Andrew P Carlson1.
Abstract
Gliomas make up nearly 40% of all central nervous system tumors, with over 50% of those being high-grade gliomas. Emerging data suggests that electrophysiologic events in the peri-tumoral region may play a role in the behavior and progression of high-grade gliomas. While seizures in the peri-tumoral zone are well described, much larger and slowly propagating waves of spreading depolarization (SD) may potentially have roles in both non-epileptic transient neurologic deficits and tumor progression. SD has only recently been observed in pre-clinical glioma models and it is not known whether these events occur clinically. We present a case of SD occurring in a human high-grade glioma using gold-standard subdural DC ECoG recordings. This finding could have meaningful implications for both clinical symptomatology and potentially for disease progression in these patients. Our observations and hypotheses are based on analogy with a large body of evidence in stroke and acute neurological injury that have recently established SD as cause of transient neurological deficits as well as a fundamental mechanism of ischemic expansion. Whether SD could represent a mechanistic target in this process to limit such progression is a high priority for further clinical investigations.Entities:
Keywords: glioblastoma; glutamate excitotoxicity; high grade glioma; spreading depolarization
Year: 2022 PMID: 35741596 PMCID: PMC9221439 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci12060710
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Summary of clinical presentation. Onset symptoms were recorded prior to surgical intervention. Doses of pharmacological treatments increased from initial presentation to time of surgical intervention for two of the patients.
| Onset Symptoms | Pathology Diagnosis | Location of Lesion | Maximum Diameter | Extent of Surgical Resection | SD(s) Observed | Pharmacological Treatments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Severe headache, extremity weakness, seizures, incontinence | Glioblastoma WHO Grade IV MGMT Promotor Hypermethylated | Right Parietal Lobe | 4 cm | Maximal Resection | N | Keppra |
|
| Motor aphasia, presyncope, extremity weakness, confusion | Glioblastoma WHO Grade IV | Left Temporal Lobe | 4.9 cm | Maximal Resection | N | Keppraa |
|
| Headaches, blurred vision, extremity weakness, seizures, incontinence | Glioblastoma WHO Grade IV IDH1 Wild Type MGMT Promotor Hypermethylated | Left Frontal Lobe | 11 cm | Subtotal Resection | Y | Keppraa |
Figure 1Example of spreading depolarization in a patient with high grade glioma. Upper left panel: pre-operative MRI with and without contrast, demonstrating contrast enhancing left frontal mass with surrounding vasogenic edema. Upper middle panel: post-operative CT, demonstrating the location of the subdural electrode (labeled 1–5) posterior to the tumor resection bed. Upper right panel: scout film from CT also demonstrating the location of the electrode. Bottom panel: referential traces from contacts 1–5 (1 is closest to tumor bed). The black traces represent time compressed, high frequency ECoG data, filtered a 0.5–50 Hz. Overlying red traces represent the same data near DC traces (>0.005 Hz for baseline leveling). A propagating wave of DC shift/slow potential change (in red) that is accompanied by transient suppression of high frequency signaling (in black) is demonstrated (blue arrows).