Asian Journal of Surgery (Jul 2014)

High-grade glioma in a patient with breast cancer

  • Che-Chao Chang,
  • Chih-Hao Tien,
  • Shih-Huang Tai,
  • Ming-Tsung Chuang,
  • Chun-I Sze,
  • Yu-Chang Hung,
  • E-Jian Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asjsur.2012.06.007
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 3
pp. 162 – 166

Abstract

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Breast cancer is one of the most common origins of metastatic lesions in the central nervous system. Many patients with a breast cancer and concurrent brain tumor(s) were diagnosed to have a metastatic lesion or lesions in the brain, based exclusively on their image findings without further pathologic verification, and received radiotherapy alone thereafter. It is, however, possible that a different pathology such as primary brain malignancy, which actually warrants a specific treatment modality, may occur in such patients with an already known malignancy. We, herein, reported a 61-year-old female patient who suffered from an anaplastic oligodendroglioma 1 year after her diagnosis of breast cancer. Demographic data, characteristic imaging findings, treatment, and outcome of the patient were discussed.

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