Alexandre Boutet, Mikail Malik, A. Yang, J. Germann, Samuel S Haile, Hyo Jin Son, Artur Vetkas, V. Pai, Warren P Mason, Gelareh Zadeh, Daniel M Mandell
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The diagnosis of leptomeningeal metastatic disease has major prognostic and therapeutic implications. We report 13 patients with a radiologically distinct kind of focal, enhancing leptomeningeal lesion on brain MRI that mimics leptomeningeal metastatic disease.
These patients were assessed at University Health Network (Toronto, Canada) between January 2001 and December 2023.
Median age was 68 years (range, 55–78 years) and 10 patients were women. All patients had brain MRI including contrast-enhanced T2-weighted fluid attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR) and T1-weighted spin echo sequences. MRI in all 13 patients showed a focal enhancing lesion located along the leptomeningeal surface of the brain. The MRI exams were reported as possible or likely leptomeningeal metastatic disease for the majority (9/13) of patients. Each lesion was curvilinear rather than sheet-like, and some lesions consisted of multiple connected/branching curvilinear structures with the appearance of abnormal vessels. Some lesions had a visible connection with a nearby cortical vein. The lesions were distinct from normal blood vessels. Follow-up contrast-enhanced brain MRI for 8/13 (62%) patients at a median of 3.9 years (IQR 2.4–6.6 years) showed all lesions were unchanged over time. Another 2/13 (15%) patients had clinical and CT brain follow-up after one year with no evidence of metastatic disease.
We describe a distinct kind of focal, enhancing leptomeningeal lesion on brain MRI that mimics metastatic disease. These lesions are likely a type of low-flow vascular anomaly. Their curvilinear/branching shape and intense enhancement particularly on T2-weighted FLAIR images distinguishes these lesions from tumor.
期刊介绍:
Neuro-Oncology Practice focuses on the clinical aspects of the subspecialty for practicing clinicians and healthcare specialists from a variety of disciplines including physicians, nurses, physical/occupational therapists, neuropsychologists, and palliative care specialists, who have focused their careers on clinical patient care and who want to apply the latest treatment advances to their practice. These include: Applying new trial results to improve standards of patient care Translating scientific advances such as tumor molecular profiling and advanced imaging into clinical treatment decision making and personalized brain tumor therapies Raising awareness of basic, translational and clinical research in areas of symptom management, survivorship, neurocognitive function, end of life issues and caregiving