Malignant epithelioid glioneuronal tumor with BRAF V600E mutation
A 19-year-old female presented with new onset seizure. She was in goodhealth other than a febrile seizure at 8 months of age but did have nauseaand vomiting the week prior to seizure onset. She had a generalized tonicclonic seizure and a post ictal period with subsequent nausea andvomiting. She returned to baseline with no further seizures. CT revealed a right frontal parasagittal hyperdense mass with mass effect.MRI of the brain revealed a parasagittal right frontal lobe 3.8 x 3.1 x 3.4cm intra-axial mass with mild surrounding edema. The mass contained acentral T2 hyperintense, non-enhancing cystic focus and areas that are T2isointense to gray matter, with restricted diffusion, that enhanced withcontrast administration. There were 2 small foci of enhancementimmediately adjacent to the mass inferiorly measuring 9.4 mm and 6.6mm each. The patient was started on anti-seizure medicationand steroids and underwent a right frontal craniotomy with gross totalresection of the mass. Histo-pathology revealed a hypercellular high-grade malignant neoplasmwith distinctly epithelioid tumor cells. The tumor cells showed a strikingperivascular pattern of arrangement of tumor cells around blood vesselsreminiscent of perivascular pseudorosettes in some areas andpseudopapillary arrangement of the tumor cells with multiple layers oftumor cells arranged around blood vessels without intervening solid sheetsof tumor cells in others. The tumor cells had round nuclei and moderateamounts of clear or eosinophilic cytoplasm with small nucleoli.Abundant mitotic figures including atypical mitoses were seen with focalnecrosis and prominent vascular endothelial cells. The tumor was somewhat circumscribed from the neural parenchyma in some areas, but inother areas there was diffuse infiltration as well as extension along bloodvessels in a perivascular manner Malignant glioneuronal tumors have malignant features in the neuronal,glial or both components. Asides from anaplastic gangliogliomas,malignant glioneuronal tumors are rare though several variants have beenreported recently. Malignant epithelioid glioneuronal tumors are rarehigh-grade malignant glioneuronal tumors that express both glial andneuronal markers and show epithelioid morphology along with aggressiveclinical behavior. These tumors are not currently included in the mostrecent World Health Organization (WHO) classification of brain tumors.The most similar lesions that should be considered in the differentialdiagnosis are epithelioid glioblastomas, anaplastic pleomorphicxanthoastocytomas, and atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumors.Immunohistochemical staining can differentiate these tumors onpathology. Only a handful of cases of malignant epithelial glioneuronal tumors havebeen reported in the literature though minimal details are available. Allcases to date have been supratentorial in location with a predilection fromfrontal and parietal lobes. CT scans typically reveal a large hyperdenselesion, and MR imaging reveals a large heterogeneous mass with edemathat enhances in some variance to contrast. In children, usually a solitarylesion is present but in adults multicentric lesions are common.Grossly, these tumors tend to be well circumscribed and highly vascularwith necrosis.Pathology reveals large epithelioid cells with open chromatin andprominent nucleoli. The cytoplasm is usually eosinophilic vacuolated,clear cell or xanthomatoid with defined borders. On immunostaining,these tumors stain positive for glial makers, typically GFAP, vimentin, orS100, and neuronal markers, typically synaptophysin, Neu-N,chromogranin, neurofilament protein, or Microtubule Associated Protein 2(MAP-2). Epithelioid glioblastomas and anaplastic pleomporphicxanthoastrocytomas typically lack immunoreactivity for neuronal markersand mutant IDH1 (R132H) immunoreactivity which can help differentiatethese tumors. All malignant epithelial glioneuronal tumors are positive for INI-1 proteinexpression, which is critical in excluding atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors where INI-1 is negative. Ki67 has increased proliferative activityin the anaplastic areas of the tumors and MIB-I shows variable butgenerally high labeling indices with up to 60% proliferation index. Despite adjunctive therapy, death usually occurs within a year of diagnosis The BRAF V600E gene mutation has been identified in many brain tumorsmost commonly pleomorphic xanthoastrocytomas and gangliogliomas;however multiple cases of glioneuronal tumors with this mutation havebeen identified. The BRAF V600E mutation has proven to be a negativeprognostic factor in other neoplasms, and is also the target for noveltherapeutic agents. These tumors are very aggressive and cases in theliterature all showed rapid progression and death within a year ofdiagnosis despite surgery, chemotherapy and radiation. BRAF-inhibitor administration for the treatment of BRAF V600Emutation positive malignant epithelioid glioneuronal tumors may be anoption to help alter the course of these highly malignant neoplasms
Regards,
Adina Bernice
Journal of Neurology and Clinical Neuroscience
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