Cases reported "Spinal Cord Neoplasms"

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1/5. Spinal atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor in an infant.

    Atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor of the central nervous system in infancy and childhood was established as an entity based on histological, immunohistochemical, and cytogenetic studies. We report the case of a 7-month-old girl who presented with progressive paraplegia and hypesthesia of her legs. Imaging studies revealed a spinal cord mass occupying the entire spinal canal below the T(7) level. Through a T(12)-L(3) laminectomy, the intramedullary tumor was partially debulked. Histologically, the tumor specimen had rhabdoid cells, and immunostaining showed vimentin and cytokeratin positivity. No abnormality of chromosome 22q was detected with the fluorescence in situ hybridization method.
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keywords = hybridization
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2/5. Clinical and molecular analysis of disseminated hemangioblastomatosis of the central nervous system in patients without von hippel-lindau disease. Report of four cases.

    Hemangioblastomas of the central nervous system (CNS) may occur sporadically or in association with von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) syndrome. The authors present four patients with no family history or clinical evidence of VHL syndrome in whom extensive, progressive, en plaque coating of the brainstem and spinal cord with hemangioblastomas developed 1 to 8 years after complete resection of a solitary cerebellar hemangioblastoma. Analysis included detailed physical, biochemical, radiological, and pathological examinations in all four patients, combined with family pedigree analysis. In addition, a detailed investigation of the VHL gene was undertaken. Allelic loss, comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), single-stranded conformational polymorphism screening, CpG island methylation status, and x chromosome inactivation clonality analyses were performed. Although there was no evidence of germline alterations in the VHL gene on clinical and radiological examination or in the family history (all four patients) or analysis of peripheral blood (three patients), somatic deletion of one copy of the VHL gene occurred in these tumors. These findings indicate that the multiple, separate deposits of tumors were likely derived from a single clone. Results of CGH indicate that one or several additional genes are probably involved in the malignant behavior of the hemangioblastomas in these patients. Furthermore, the malignant biological and clinical behavior of these tumors, in which multiple sites of subarachnoid dissemination developed 1 to 8 years after initial complete resection, followed by progressive tumor growth and death of the patients, occurred despite a histological appearance typical of benign hemangioblastomas. Malignant hemangioblastomatosis developed 1 to 8 years after resection of an isolated cerebellar hemangioblastoma. Alterations of the VHL gene may be permissive in this setting, but other genes are likely to be the source of the novel biological and clinical presentation of the disseminated hemangioblastomas in these patients. This appears to represent a novel condition in which the product of one or more mutations in several genes permits malignant tumor behavior despite retention of a benign histological picture, a circumstance previously not recognized in CNS tumors.
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keywords = hybridization
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3/5. Abnormalities of chromosome 22 in meningiomas and confirmation of the origin of a dicentric 22 by in situ hybridization.

    We report three cases of meningioma. Case 1 had a dicentric chromosome number 22 resulting in partial monosomy for a portion of the q-arm, i.e., 46,XX,idic(22)(pter-->q11.2::q11.2-->pter) and 46,XX,psu dic(22)(pter-->q11.2::q11.2-->pter), which was the sole clonal abnormality. The origin of the dicentric chromosome from 22 was confirmed by in situ hybridization studies, using biotin-labeled alpha centromeric dna probes for the acrocentric chromosomes. Case 2 had two distinct clonal abnormalities: deletion of 22q and monosomy of 22. Case 3 also had a deleted 22q.
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keywords = hybridization
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4/5. Cytokeratin-positive meningeal peripheral PNET/Ewing's sarcoma of the cervical spinal cord: diagnostic value of genetic analysis.

    Peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET)/Ewing's sarcoma (ES) of the central nervous system is extremely rare and should be differentiated from central PNET and other small blue round cell tumors. We describe a case of a meningeal peripheral PNET/ES of the spinal cord in an 11-year-old boy. Immunohistochemically, the small blue round cell tumor showed expression of epithelial markers and of CD99, thus posing an important differential diagnostic problem with a poorly differentiated synovial sarcoma. fluorescence in situ hybridization revealed rearrangement of the EWS gene, as seen in peripheral PNET/ES. Peripheral PNET/ES does occur in the central nervous system, but its diagnosis can be extremely difficult on morphologic and immunohistochemical grounds alone. Genetic analysis plays a key role in its distinction from other small blue round cell tumors.
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5/5. Polar spongioblastoma of the spinal cord: a case report.

    "Rhythmic palisading" is a striking histologic pattern infrequently encountered in a variety of central nervous system (CNS) tumors. We present the case of an infant with a large spinal cord lesion wherein all sampled tissue showed columnar arrangements of palisaded cells, typical of polar spongioblastoma. The tumor was briskly proliferative, focally necrotic, and variably expressed S100, glial fibrillary acidic protein, neuron specific enolase, and p53 by immunohistochemistry. fluorescence in situ hybridization failed to reveal isochromosome 17q, EGFR amplification, or deletions of 1p, 19q, 22q11.2, 10q, or p16. Despite chemotherapy and decadron, he developed lesional necrosis and intracranial metastases and died less than 1 mo from presentation. This case illustrates polar spongioblastoma as a distinctive histologic pattern that can occur in embryonal CNS tumors. Discrimination of these rare aggressive lesions from other CNS tumors with focal palisaded architecture is crucial as the treatment and prognosis of the latter may differ significantly.
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keywords = hybridization
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