Title: Patient Case Presentation
1Patient Case Presentation
- Neurosurgery Red Service
- Gabriel Zada, MD
- Sean McNatt, MD
- LAC-USC Medical Center
- May 24, 2006
2Patient J.P.
- History of Present Illness
- 22 year old caucasian female
- Long history of headaches
- Presented with 2 days of
- Sinus headache progressing to
- Bifrontal headache
- Somnolence
- Altered mental status
- Nausea/vomiting
- No fevers, chills
- No history of trauma
3Patient J.P.
- Past Medical History
- Headaches x 2 years
- Otherwise unremarkable past medical history
- Medications
- None
- Allergies
- None Known
- Social History
- Mother of a 2 year old child
- No tobacco, drug, or alcohol use
4Patient J.P.
- Physical Exam
- Mental Status
- Patient somnolent, partially arousable
- Oriented inconsistently to name only
- Responds inappropriately with one word responses
- Cranial Nerve Exam
- Right partial ptosis
- Papilledema
- Right pupil 5?4 mm, sluggish
- Left pupil 5?3 mm, brisk
- Extraocular movements intact
- Cranial Nerves otherwise intact
5Patient J.P.
- Motor exam
- Normal tone
- Follows simple commands intermittently
- Squeezes hands, wiggles toes
- Diffusely weak in all extremities
- Sensory Exam
- Sensation intact to light touch in all
extremities - Reflexes
- Reflexes 2, symmetrical
- No Hoffmans sign
- Toes downgoing
- Cerebellar/Gait exam
- Mild dysmetria bilaterally on finger-nose test
- Gait Deferred
6CT Scan
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16Initial Management
- Patient transferred to LAC Medical Center
- Right ventriculostomy placed
- CSF sent for cytology ? atypical cells
- Patients exam significantly improved
- Awake, alert
- Oriented to name only (San Dimas , 1993)
- Significant short-term memory deficits
- Partial right IIIrd nerve palsy improved
- No pronator drift, power 5/5 throughout
17CT Scan
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27MRI Brain
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61Surgery
- Right interhemispheric transcallosal approach to
third ventricle - Patients right side down
- Frozen pathology ? malignant glial tumor with
high cellularity - Gross total resection
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66Transcallosal Approach to the Third Ventricle
- Position with head in lateral position to allow
gravity to facilitate in retraction - Bone flap 2/3 anterior to coronal suture and 1/3
posterior to coronal suture - May modify accordingly for anterior versus
posterior third ventricular lesions - Callosal incision between 2 ACAs
- Must account for shift involved with lateral
positioning - Callosotomy approximately 2-3 cm in length
- Some authors advocate transverse callosotomy
67Video
68Postoperative MRI Brain
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92Postoperative Course
- Patient with unchanged neurological status
following procedure - Ventriculostomy left in place yet unable to wean
off - Left VP shunt placed on postoperative day 7
- Short term memory slightly improved over course
of week - Patient transferred to step-down
93Pathology
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98DiagnosisIntraventricular Anaplastic
Oligodendroglioma (WHO Grade III)
99Oligodendroglioma Background
- Two recognized grades
- WHO grade II oligodendroglioma
- WHO grade III anaplastic oligodendroglioma
- 4 of all primary brain tumors
- Mean age approximately 43 years
- 6 during infancy and childhood
- No known patterns of inheritance
- Most commonly occur in white matter of frontal
and temporal lobes - Intraventricular oligodendroglioma
- Approximately 20 case reports in the literature
100Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma Epidemiology
- Account for 3 of all adult supratentorial
primary malignant gliomas - Account for 20-54 of all oligodendrogliomas
- Most common in adults (mean age 49 years)
- Older than patients with grade II
oligodendrogliomas - Male to female ratio 1.5 1
- Preference for frontal lobe (60) followed by
temporal lobe (33)
101Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma Histopathology
- Share with oligodendroglioma
- Honeycomb appearance with clear cytoplasm
- Fried egg yolk appearance
- Frequent calcification
- Occasional gemistocytes
- Often GFAP and S-100 positive
- Perinuclear halos
- Diffuse features of malignancy
- Increased cellularity
- Cellular atypia
- High mitotic index
- Necrosis and microvascular proliferation may be
present - Occasional multinucleated giant cells of Zulch
102Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma Differential
Diagnosis
- All with neoplastic cells with round nucleus and
clear cytoplasm (oligodendroglioma-like cells or
OLCs) - Clear cell ependymoma
- ependymal features (ie rosettes) help
differentiate - Central neurocytoma
- Synaptophysin positive, more commonly originates
in ventricles - Clear cell meningioma
- PAS positive, EMA immunoreactivity
- Metastatic renal cell tumor
103Oligodendroglioma Molecular Genetics
- Chromosome 19
- Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on long arm of
chromosome 19 (19q) - 50-80 of cases
- Chromosome 1
- LOH on short arm (1p) in 67 of cases
- Almost always coexists with LOH at 19q
- Polysomia, deletions on other chromosomes (ie
9,10) - Progression to malignancy correlates with EGFR,
PDGF overexpression - Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (FISH) used to
detect - Lack of correlation between histology and
molecular markers
104Oligodendroglioma Molecular genetics
- Several molecular subtypes
- 1) Combined/isolated loss of 1p/19q
- More likely frontal, parietal
- Diffuse enhancement
- Close to 100 response rate
- Survival greater than 10 years
- 2) 1p loss without 19q loss
- Close to 100 response rate
- Survival approximately 6 years
- 3) No deletion of 1p/19q with TP53 mutation
- More likely temporal, insular
- Ringe enhancement more likely
- 33 response rate
- Survival approximately 6 years
- 4) No deletion of 1p/19q, no TP53 mutation, yet
other mutations - 18 response rate
- Survival generally less than 18 months
105Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma Multimodal treatment
- Surgery is still primary treatment
- Gross total resection whenever possible
- Mixed data regarding adjuvant radiotherapy
- Postoperative radiation therapy has been shown to
extend survival, yet carries associated morbidity - Delayed XRT as effective as immediate postop XRT
in one study - Another study showed no benefit to radiotherapy
- XRT/chemo current standard in recurrent,
high-grade oligodendroglioma - Salvage therapy frequently chemotherapy with stem
cell rescue
106Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma Response to
chemotherapy
- Tumors with combined 1p and 19q deletions are
often responsive to chemotherapy - Procarbazine, CCNU, Vincristine (PCV)
- Many side effects including myelosuppression in
46 - More recently, temozolamide (in trials)
- Half of such tumors show complete radiological
responses to chemotherapy - Mean survival time 10 years with these deletions
compared to patients without these deletions
(mean 2 years)
107Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma Prognosis
- Median survival time of 4 years
- Five year survival 41
- Ten year survival 20
- Local tumor recurrence occurs frequently
- Leptomeningeal spreading (oligodendrogliomatosis
) has also been described - Metastatic disease uncommon, yet incidence may be
increasing - Most common sites bone, lymph nodes, scalp
- Good prognostic factors
- Younger patient age
- Female sex
- Seizure as presenting symptom
108References
- 1. Merrell R et al. 1p/19q chromosome deletions
in metastatic oligodendroglioma. J Neurooncology.
2006 - 2. Waldron JS, Tihan T. Epidemiology and
pathology of intraventricular tumors.
Neurosurgery Clinical of N America. 14 (2003)
469-482 - 3. Dumont AS et al. Intraventricular gliomas.
Neurosurgery Clinical of N America. 14 (2003)
571-591 - 4. Reifenberger G. Anaplastic oligodendroglioma.
In Tumours of the Nervous System. (Kleihues P,
Cavanee WK, eds.) IARC Press, 2000. - 5. Kasowski HJ et al. Transcallosal
Transchoroidal Approach to Tumors of the Third
Ventricle. Neurosurgery 57, Suppl 3. 361-366,
2005 - 6. Engelhard HH. Current diagnosis and treatment
of Oligodendroglioma. Neurosurgical Focus. 12(2),
2002.
109Thank You