Intracranial high-grade glioma with malignant progression of spinal intramedullary metastasis: an atypical presentation with review of literature.
Hardik Lalit SiroyaIndira Devi BhagavatulaDhanjaya Ishwar BhatNishanth SadashivaPublished in: British journal of neurosurgery (2021)
In this case, the primary histopathological diagnosis post cranial tumour removal was Grade-3 anaplastic astrocytoma, whereas Spinal autopsy report done 16 months after the primary diagnosis showed Grade-4 GBM suggestive of secondary transformation (Secondary GBM), it showed same genome of IDH mutation and ATRX loss, neoplastic fibrillary and gemistocytic astrocytes with de-differentiation, foamy histiocytes as seen in primary lesion suggestive of progression and metachronicity rather than multicentricity or synchronicity. What is more peculiar and rare in our case is that the spinal disease was very malignant and it progressed in course of just two days to involve the whole spine.Key pointsMalignant ultra-rapid progression of spinal metastasis.Thorough review of literatureMetachronicity of spinal metastasisImportance of the studyThis study presents a very atypical case of malignant progression of spinal metastasis documented with successive MRI radiology scans in a span of mere two days.It is different from other studies in the sense such malignant progression in a span of few days has never been documented with radiographs.This manuscript also provides an exhaustive review of literature and draws comparisons among the same.This study compares→ Time period to diagnosis of spinal metastasis following primary diagnosis, Outcome from diagnosis of spine metastasis, age along with other variables like histopathology of spinal metastasis if available, Treatment underwent, site of metastasis among different studies.