Lumbosacral glioblastoma and leptomeningeal gliomatosis complicating the course of a cervicothoracic astrocytoma WHO grade II.

  • Daniel Klase
  • Stefan Gottschalk
  • Erich Reusche
  • Christian Hagel
  • Einar Goebel
  • Volker Tronnier
  • Alf Giese

Related Research units

Abstract

CASE REPORT: The reported female patient underwent sub-total resection of an intra-medullary cervicothoracic astrocytoma classified as WHO grade II in 1984 at the age of 18 months and received local irradiation. In 1989, a local recurrence was diagnosed and a partial resection was performed. Sixteen years later, a small recurrent cervicothoracic tumour was found and spinal seeding to the equine nerve roots and the left cerebellar cortex was apparent on MRI. The patient was implanted with a ventriculoperitoneal shunt for a pseudo-tumour cerebri producing papilloedema, which eventually lead to amaurosis. After an extended biopsy, the invasive lumbosacral tumour was classified as glioblastoma multiforme. Two months later, the patient died after rapid progression of the caudal cranial nerve dysfunction. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Anaplastic progression and dissemination of spinal astrocytomas even two decades after initial diagnosis and treatment are rare. Therapies and diagnostic follow-up strategies are discussed.

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number8
ISSN0256-7040
Publication statusPublished - 2007
pubmed 17440736