Anaplastic Childhood Meningioma in a 16-Year-Old Boy
Author(s) -
Emel Ebru Pala,
Ülkü Küçük,
Ebru Arabacı Çakır,
Özcan Binatlı
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
medical science and discovery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2148-6832
DOI - 10.17546/msd.48143
Subject(s) - medicine , meningioma , grading (engineering) , vimentin , proliferation index , pathology , magnetic resonance imaging , mitotic index , immunohistochemistry , proliferative index , radiology , mitosis , civil engineering , biology , engineering , microbiology and biotechnology
Meningiomas account for 0.4-4.6% of all primary brain tumors in children. Childhood meningiomas have several different characteristics than those occuring in adults. Case: Here we report a 16 year old male presented with long-standing headache and incipient weakness on the left side. Magnetic resonance images revealed a 65x47x37 mm sized, right sided frontoparietal parasagittal extraaxial mass. Histopathologic examination showed monotonous, small cells with oval/round nucleus forming whorl like structures. Tumor showed high mitotic index and Ki67 proliferation rate around 30%. Immunohistochemically tumor cells were positive with EMA, vimentin, bcl-2, progesterone receptor. The final diagnosis according to histopathological, radiological and immunohistochemical findings was anaplastic meningioma. Conclusion: High-grade meningiomas are rare in children. Appropriate grading is important, as high grade tumors with high proliferation index are associated with less favorable clinical outcomes and warrant more radical treatment.
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