Malignant progression of cerebellopontine angle solitary fibrous tumors following radiation: illustrative case.
Publication/Presentation Date
3-21-2022
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intracranial solitary fibrous tumors (ISFTs) are rare mesenchymal tumors originating in the meninges and constitute a heterogeneous group of clinical and biological behavior. Benign histotypes, such as hemangiopericytomas are now considered as a cellular phenotypic variant of this heterogenous group of rare spindle-cell tumors. IFSTs are poorly recognized and remain a diagnostic challenge due to rarity and resemblance to other brain tumors. Previously, IFSTs were thought to pursue a slow, indolent, and nonaggressive course, however, a growing body of literature based on longer follow-up demonstrates an unpredictable clinical course and an uncertain diagnosis.
OBSERVATIONS: A rare case report of malignant transformation of IFST following radiation therapy is reported. In this case a 60-year-old female who underwent gross total resection of the cerebellopontine angle tumor with histopathology consistent with solitary fibrous tumor followed by salvage stereotactic radiosurgery, presented with another recurrence after 2 years of surgery. The authors performed complete removal of the tumor with pathology now consistent with malignant solitary fibrous tumor. A recent follow-up magnetic resonance imaging did not show any recurrence or residual tumor, and the patient reports a generalized well-being.
LESSONS: This report will help to understand the natural history and unusual clinical behavior of these intracranial tumors.
Volume
3
Issue
12
ISSN
2694-1902
Published In/Presented At
La Dine, A. K., Fatima, N., Barnard, Z. R., Slattery, W. H., & Lekovic, G. P. (2022). Malignant progression of cerebellopontine angle solitary fibrous tumors following radiation: illustrative case. Journal of neurosurgery. Case lessons, 3(12), CASE21646. https://doi.org/10.3171/CASE21646
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
36273870
Department(s)
Department of Surgery Faculty
Document Type
Article