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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Remote
metastases
, leptomeningeal dissemination and spreading of the tumor by infiltration are rare complications of
glioblastoma multiforme
. The existence of different forms of spreading simultaneously is very rare. We present a case of a young patient with
glioblastoma multiforme
who was operated and subsequently received radiation therapy and cytotoxic treatment. Eight months following the operation, the patient developed cauda equina syndrome. Bone metastases of vertebrae and ribs, and direct infiltration of the recurrent tumor mass into the ethmoidal and frontal sinuses were found. The described patient demonstrates a very rare combination of all forms of spreading
metastases
in
glioblastoma multiforme
. The infiltration of the tumor mass into the sinuses and the direct permeation of the meningeal and dural venous system and of the leptomeninges, may explain the mechanism of the development of distant
metastases
and leptomeningeal dissemination in
glioblastoma multiforme
.
...
PMID:Glioblastoma multiforme with bone metastase and cauda equina syndrome. 216 16
Although the spread of supratentorial
glioblastoma multiforme
to the brain stem and spine has been extensively described in published autopsy series, information on the diagnosis, treatment, and subsequent clinical course of patients manifesting symptoms of glioblastomatous dissemination ante mortem remains scant. We report a series of 11 patients having the signs and symptoms of neuraxis dissemination of supratentorial
glioblastoma multiforme
. All patients had radiographic documentation of
metastases
by either contrast-enhanced myelograms or enhanced magnetic resonance imaging scans. Ten presented with spinal involvement, whereas one presented with lower cranial neuropathies secondary to diffuse involvement of the basal cisterns. The mean age of the patients was 38.5 years, and the mean time interval between diagnosis of intracranial disease and diagnosis of
metastases
was 14.1 months. After diagnosis of tumor spread, subsequent mean survival time was 2.8 months. All patients received additional radiotherapy to the areas of metastasis, but the clinical response to radiotherapy was quite poor. This study confirms previous reports in the literature suggesting that
metastases
occur in younger patients and in patients with extended survival. The findings suggest that the relatively infrequent clinical incidence of the symptomatic spread of
glioblastoma multiforme
, as compared with the frequent incidental discovery of such spread at autopsy, may be the result of the limited survival of the affected patients, and not due to the biology of the tumor.
...
PMID:Brain stem and spinal metastases of supratentorial glioblastoma multiforme: a clinical series. 217 59
Eighteen patients with poorly differentiated gliomas of the cerebellum were treated by the University of California San Francisco Neuro-Oncology Service between January 1977 and January 1987. Within this group pathologic diagnosis included five
glioblastoma multiforme
(28%), nine anaplastic astrocytomas (50%), and four mixed malignant gliomas (22%). The group included 13 male and five female patients with a median age at diagnosis of 23 years (range, 4-46 years). All patients underwent surgical resection, 16 of 18 received radiation therapy (12 limited-field irradiation and four whole-brain with or without a posterior fossa boost), and 16 of 18 received chemotherapy. Overall median survival was 31.5 months (range, 5-366 months). Ten patients (55%) died of recurrent disease with a median survival of 32 months (range, 5-128 months), two of whom manifested
metastatic disease
within the central nervous system (one parietal lobe and one cervical cord). Of the two extracerebellar metastatic recurrences, one patient failed at the junction of whole-brain irradiation and the cervical cord and one patient failed after inadequate posterior fossa irradiation. Eight patients (45%) are alive with a median follow-up of 27.5 months (range, 14-366 months). In this series recurrences of primary cerebellar anaplastic gliomas were locoregional failures. As a consequence, the authors suggest high-dose limited-field irradiation directed at the primary tumor as in their current strategy utilized for supratentorial gliomas.
...
PMID:Poorly differentiated gliomas of the cerebellum. A study of 18 patients. 229 56
The prognosis of the patients with
metastases
to the brain is very poor. Based on the data obtained from the Brain Tumor Registry in Japan, relative survival rate curve of the cases with metastatic brain tumors is extremely similar to that of the cases with
glioblastoma multiforme
which is the most malignant primary brain tumor. Data obtained from the Department of Neurosurgery of Osaka University Medical School, the Center for Adult Diseases, Osaka demonstrated that the brain lesions were the direct causes of death only in 26% of the cancer patients with brain metastases. The result might have indicated that brain metastasis itself could be more controllable than the other lesions of systemic in most of the cases. The indications for surgical treatment of metastatic brain tumors are, in general, as follows; (1) the primary cancer is cured or to be cured, (2) no metastasis to other organs, (3) the brain metastasis is single, solitary and surgically accessible, and (4) the general condition is good enough. But recent advancement in the diagnosis, surgery and patient care are going to extend the indications for surgical treatment. Surgical mortality becomes less than a few percent. The changes of performance status by surgery were investigated in the patients treated in Department of Neurosurgery, Osaka University Medical School and the Center for Adult Diseases, Osaka. Improvement of the performance status after surgery was obtained in 57.8%, stationary in 30.5%, and worsening only in 11.8%.
...
PMID:[Metastases to the brain--prognosis and surgical indications]. 234 91
Extracranial bone metastases from
glioblastoma multiforme
are rarely reported in the medical literature. The authors describe a case of
glioblastoma multiforme
with distant osseous
metastases
that were detected by a Tc-99m MDP image. The
metastases
were osteolytic and expansile on plain radiographs.
...
PMID:Multiple bone metastases in a patient with glioblastoma multiforme. 254 Sep 29
During the 30 year period from 1957 to 1986, 42 patients with primary tumors arising from the spinal cord or cauda equina received postoperative irradiation at the University of California, San Francisco. Twenty-one patients had ependymomas: 18 were localized to one site, and 3 diffusely involved the cord. There were 12 patients with low grade astrocytomas and 3 with highly anaplastic astrocytoma or
glioblastoma multiforme
. All astrocytomas were localized at presentation. In 6 cases tissue was insufficient to permit a histologic diagnosis. Thirty-nine patients (93%) received total radiation doses ranging between 45.0-54.7 Gy using standard fractionation. The 10-year actuarial disease-specific survival rate for patients with localized ependymoma was 93%; 33% of these tumors recurred locally. The corresponding rate for diffuse ependymomas was 50%; the spinal disease was controlled in all 3 patients, but one developed a cerebral metastasis despite prophylactic cranial irradiation. Low-grade astrocytoma patients had a 10-year actuarial disease-specific survival rate of 91%, with 33% of these tumors recurring locally. No patient with highly anaplastic astrocytoma or
glioblastoma multiforme
survived longer than 8 months; all of these tumors recurred locally, and two of the three also developed diffuse craniospinal axis
metastases
. Local recurrence for ependymoma was delayed as long as 12 years following treatment, while all but one astrocytoma failure occurred within 3 years of treatment. No significant dose-response relationship with respect to local control was noted for either localized ependymomas or low grade astrocytomas. One patient developed radiation myelitis after receiving 50.4 Gy with standard fractionation. These results indicate that patients who undergo postoperative irradiation for low grade spinal astrocytomas and localized spinal ependymomas achieve excellent survival. However, despite treatment with total radiation doses taken to the practical limit of spinal cord tolerance, local failure remains common.
...
PMID:Postoperative radiotherapy of primary spinal cord tumors. 254 94
Osseous
metastases
from primary central nervous system (CNS) tumors are rare. The CNS tumors that most frequently
metastasize
to bone are the
glioblastoma multiforme
and the medulloblastoma. In this report, a 22-year-old woman sought treatment for a lytic lesion in her right proximal femur 18 months after a craniotomy to remove a pinealoblastoma, a rare primitive neuroectodermal tumor of the pineal gland. An extensive evaluation demonstrated no other primary tumors. A biopsy of the femoral lesion revealed that it was morphologically identical to the pinealoblastoma, and special immunohistochemical stains were performed that verified neuronal differentiation. This may be the first report of a pinealoblastoma associated with an extracranial skeletal metastasis.
...
PMID:Extracranial skeletal metastasis from a pinealoblastoma. A case report and review of the literature. 267 97
Spontaneous extracranial
metastases
of
glioblastoma multiforme
in the absence of previous surgery have been rarely reported (Table 1). We presented an autopsy case of
glioblastoma multiforme
which spontaneously metastasized to the lungs, bronchial lymph nodes, liver, kidney, heart and spleen. A 68-year-old man was admitted to the Department of Neurosurgery at our hospital with chief complaints of right sided weakness in July 1984. He was well until November 1983, when he noticed weakness of right lower extremity followed one month later by the weakness in the right arm. He was treated at another hospital under the diagnosis of cerebral infarction, but his right sided weakness gradually progressed. In June 1984, a diagnosis of brain tumor was made by the neurological findings and CT scan, and he was transferred to our hospital for further evaluation and treatment. Neurological examination revealed disorientation, bilateral papilledema, right hemiparesis, right hyperreflexia and right hemisensory disturbance. CT scan revealed abnormal low density area in the left fronto-parietal lobe (Fig. 1) with irregular enhanced lesions on contrast CT scan (Fig. 2). Chest x-ray showed abnormal shadow in the right middle and lower lobe (Fig. 3) and a diagnosis of pulmonary infarction was suspected. The clinical states of this patient took downhill course and he expired on July 13, 1984 by the complication of disseminated intravascular coagulation syndrome. The brain weight was 1400 gr. Dura mater and falx cerebri were tightly adherent to the left parietal lobe (Fig. 4). Primary brain tumor was found in the left fronto-parietal region. The tumor was poorly defined with necrosis and hemorrhage (Fig. 5).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Glioblastoma multiforme with extracranial metastases without previous surgery: demonstration of extracranial metastases by peroxidase antiperoxidase staining and clinicopathological study]. 282 54
It is generally accepted that the
metastases
of intracranial glioma to extracranial location are rare. In such a case the minimal criteria proposed originally by Weiss should usually be satisfied if a report is to be considered as an acceptable case of metastasizing central nervous system glioma outside the central nervous system. We report a case of
glioblastoma multiforme
, fulfilling Weiss' criteria, metastasizing the spinal epidural space. The patient was a 32-year-old male, who underwent craniotomy and subtotal removal of a
glioblastoma multiforme
in the left parietooccipital area. He was additionally treated with irradiation and chemotherapeutic agents. Twelve months after the craniotomy, he was admitted again to our clinic because of sudden onset of severe lumbago, paraplegia and urinary disturbance. Diagnosis of a spinal epidural tumor was made and laminectomy (Th10-L1) was performed. At operation, an epidural mass was found, however no invasion to the spinal cord or dura was noted. Histological diagnosis of the tumor was
glioblastoma multiforme
. Although he was treated with radiation, pulmonary metastasis was manifested one month later, and the condition of the patient deteriorated. He died 21 months after the first operation and 8 months after the second operation. Even at the terminal stage, his consciousness was clear without any sign for recurrence of intracranial tumor. The general autopsy was done and multiple metastatic lesions of
glioblastoma multiforme
in paratracheal and paraaortic lymph node, left pleura, both lungs and spinal cord were observed. The present case suggests that the surgical intervention, irradiation, and chemotherapy may contribute to extracranial metastasis of a glioblastoma.
...
PMID:[Spinal epidural metastasis of glioblastoma multiforme: a case report]. 298 97
Diffuse astrocytomas of the cerebrum, cerebellum, brain stem, and spinal cord are classified into three groups according to the degree of tumor anaplasia. These groups are the astrocytoma, anaplastic astrocytoma, and
glioblastoma multiforme
. Juvenile pilocytic astrocytomas have a better prognosis and are clinically and biologically distinct from the diffuse, fibrillary astrocytomas. The prognosis of astrocytomas depends not only on histologic characteristics, but also age of the patient, location of the tumor, and extent of surgical resection. The pattern of invasion into surrounding brain distinguishes gliomas from metastatic carcinomas and sarcomas. Topographic correlations have shown that malignant gliomas may invade the brain for distances of up to several centimeters from the enhancing rim seen on CT scan. However, the junction between glioblastoma and adjacent brain may also be fairly abrupt, with a peripheral margin of less than 1 mm. Recurrent glioblastomas are more widely invasive and often extend into areas that appear normal on CT scan. The optimal site for tumor biopsy corresponds to areas of contrast enhancement. Primitive neuroepithelial tumors are malignant neoplasms with a poor prognosis. They tend to recur locally and
metastasize
throughout the neuraxis via the CSF. It remains controversial whether these tumors should be classified as a single entity with the potential for differentiation along different cell lines, or whether the categories of neuroblastoma, spongioblastoma, ependymoblastoma, pineoblastoma, and medulloblastoma should be retained as specific entities. The medulloblastoma is the most common of these neoplasms, its clinicopathologic features are well characterized, and the current 5-year survivals of 50 to 60 per cent are better than for other "primitive" neoplasms. Glial fibrillary acidic protein is a specific marker for immature, reactive, and neoplastic astrocytes and ependymal cells. Although the absence of GFAP in a neoplasm does not exclude an astrocytic origin, the presence of GFAP indicates astrocytic or ependymal differentiation. This has important diagnostic applications. The expression of GFAP is used to distinguish astrocytic neoplasms from epithelial or mesenchymal tumors that may on occasion mimic a glioma. The detection of GFAP is also useful in the investigation of tumor histogenesis and differentiation both in vivo and in vitro. Although meningiomas exhibit a wide variety of histologic patterns, most tumors exhibit similar biologic and clinical behavior regardless of the histologic subtype.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pathologic analysis of primary brain tumors. 300 88
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