Sebastian Victor Trifoi, Shubhabrata Biswas, Rafal Szylak, Nicholas Carleton-Bland
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Pilocytic Astrocytomas are generally presenting as WHO grade 1 intracranial masses in the paediatric population with a favourable prognostic. In less common instances they can be found in the spinal cord. There have been rare cases of Anaplastic variants of the Cranial Pilocytic Astrocytomas. We report a rare instance of an adult patient with pilocytic astrocytoma of the cervical cord with anaplastic features. Our patient presented with 6 months history of neck pain and right-hand paraesthesia which partially responded to steroid treatment. MRI of the cervical spine demonstrated marked expansion of the cervical cord with oedema extending cranially to the medulla and caudally to the mid-thoracic cord. Post-gadolinium T1-weighted images showed intense intramedullary enhancement mainly centred at the level of the C3 vertebra. Diffusion Tensor Imaging Tractography showed the central location of the tumour expanding the cord and displacing the tracts circumferentially. Surgical resection was performed in two stages according to the Elsberg and Beer technique that assisted with safe margin tumour debulking. The histological sections revealed a glial lineage tumour with retained ATRX nuclear expression, positive for GFAP, Ki-67 estimated to 10% and a methylation class corresponding to an Anaplastic Pilocytic Astrocytoma. Subsequently, our patient underwent adjuvant radiotherapy and chemotherapy (10 cycles of Temozolamide and 6 cycles of CCNU). Symptomatic progression developed at 18 months from the initial surgery, radiological progression at 34 months and the overall survival was 40 months. We reviewed the literature and found only four other cases with similar histology.
期刊介绍:
The British Journal of Neurosurgery is a leading international forum for debate in the field of neurosurgery, publishing original peer-reviewed articles of the highest quality, along with comment and correspondence on all topics of current interest to neurosurgeons worldwide.
Coverage includes all aspects of case assessment and surgical practice, as well as wide-ranging research, with an emphasis on clinical rather than experimental material. Special emphasis is placed on postgraduate education with review articles on basic neurosciences and on the theory behind advances in techniques, investigation and clinical management. All papers are submitted to rigorous and independent peer-review, ensuring the journal’s wide citation and its appearance in the major abstracting and indexing services.