Diffuse Leptomeningeal Glioneuronal Tumour with 9-Year Follow-Up: Case Report and Review of the Literature.
Milda SarkinaiteIndre DevyzieneJurgita MakstieneAlgimantas MatukeviciusRymante GleiznienePublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
In 2016, the World Health Organisation Classification (WHO) of Tumours was updated with diffuse leptomeningeal glioneuronal tumour (DLGNT) as a provisional unit of mixed neuronal and glial tumours. Here, we report a DLGNT that has been re-diagnosed with the updated WHO classification, with clinical features, imaging, and histopathological findings and a 9-year follow-up. A 16-year-old girl presented with headache, vomiting, and vertigo. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated a hyperintense mass with heterogenous enhancement in the right cerebellopontine angle and internal auditory canal. No leptomeningeal involvement was seen. The histological examination revealed neoplastic tissue of moderate cellularity formed mostly by oligodendrocyte-like cells. Follow-up MRI scans demonstrated cystic lesions in the subarachnoid spaces in the brain with vivid leptomeningeal enhancement. Later spread of the tumour was found in the spinal canal. On demand biopsy samples were re-examined, and pathological diagnosis was identified as DLGNT. In contrast to most reported DLGNTs, the tumour described in this manuscript did not present with diffuse leptomeningeal spread, but later presented with leptomeningeal involvement in the brain and spinal cord. Our case expands the spectrum of radiological features, provides a long-term clinical and radiological follow-up, and highlights the major role of molecular genetic testing in unusual cases.
Keyphrases
- cerebrospinal fluid
- magnetic resonance imaging
- contrast enhanced
- spinal cord
- brain metastases
- low grade
- machine learning
- high resolution
- deep learning
- magnetic resonance
- public health
- white matter
- diffusion weighted imaging
- neuropathic pain
- resting state
- spinal cord injury
- small cell lung cancer
- working memory
- multiple sclerosis
- brain injury
- human health